Stamp Duty

91 articles found

Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) affects every UK property purchase. Explore our expert guides on rates, surcharges, reliefs, and how to calculate your liability before you buy.

Knight Frank analysis shows prime London property markets are increasingly driven by domestic political uncertainty — including potential rent controls, wealth taxes, and leadership speculation — rather than global events, with prices and transaction volumes continuing to fall. PCL prices are now 22% below their 2015 peak and exchanges in the first four months of 2026 are 12% lower year-on-year.

Tags: Market Trends, Tax, Regulations & Compliance, Stamp Duty, Rental Yield
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Labour leadership candidates are proposing CGT alignment with income tax and new council tax levies on overseas high-value property owners, which Knight Frank warns could compound landlord exits, suppress international investment, and keep mortgage rates elevated — with prime central London already showing measurable price and transaction pressure.

Tags: Capital Gains Tax, Tax, Buy-to-Let, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Stamp Duty, Mortgages, EPC / Energy Efficiency, Market Trends
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Knight Frank's UK residential research head assesses a cluster of emerging policy risks — CGT alignment, council tax surcharges on high-value properties, and bond market pressures — alongside data showing prime central London transactions 18% below average and prices 22% off peak. The article signals higher-for-longer mortgage rates and potential further landlord exit triggers.

Tags: Capital Gains Tax, Stamp Duty, Tax, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Market Trends, Mortgages, EPC / Energy Efficiency
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The Centre for London has proposed replacing stamp duty and council tax with an annual proportional property tax (PPT) calculated as a percentage of current market value, arguing it would unlock 79,000 additional homes per year and fund 106,000 affordable homes over a decade. The proposal would significantly alter holding and transaction costs for London property owners, with rates starting at 0.39% on values up to £800,000.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Tax, Regulations & Compliance, Market Trends
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Research commissioned by Spring and conducted by Volterra argues that removing the HRAD surcharge for corporate property traders could unlock up to 168,000 additional UK property transactions annually, improving housing market liquidity significantly. The study quantifies the drag of stamp duty on transaction volumes and calls for demand-side reforms alongside supply measures.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Tax, Market Trends, Regulations & Compliance
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UK buy-to-let landlords face a compounding regulatory and financial squeeze — from Section 24, S21 abolition, SDLT surcharges, and EPC targets — accelerating portfolio exits and tightening supply. Simultaneously, an emerging trend of wealthier older homeowners choosing to rent rather than downsize could reshape rental demand demographics.

Tags: Buy-to-Let, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Section 21, Section 24, Stamp Duty, Capital Gains Tax, EPC / Energy Efficiency, HMO, Market Trends, Tax
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Off-plan new home sales hit a 12-year low at 33% of new builds in 2025, driven by the exit of BTL investors following stamp duty surcharge increases and the end of Help to Buy, with developers now bearing an estimated £3,125 per unit in additional financing costs. The North West — particularly Oldham, Salford — remains the strongest off-plan market, while London and southern regions have seen the sharpest declines.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Buy-to-Let, Market Trends, Tax, Regulations & Compliance
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The Conservative Party is actively promoting a proposal to abolish stamp duty on primary residences, with the Shadow Chancellor citing transaction volume collapse and broader economic harm as justification. While still opposition policy, the proposal signals continued political pressure on transaction taxes and highlights the structural damage of current SDLT levels.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Market Trends, Tax, Regulations & Compliance
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UK buy-to-let landlords are exiting the private rental sector at an accelerating pace due to compounding regulatory burdens and weakening returns, while an emerging cohort of asset-rich older renters may simultaneously increase rental demand, tightening supply further.

Tags: Buy-to-Let, Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Section 21, Section 24, Stamp Duty, EPC / Energy Efficiency, Tax, Market Trends, Capital Gains Tax
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Paragon Bank analysis shows HRAD (additional dwelling) stamp duty transactions now account for over 50% of receipts in 56% of English councils, up from 22% in 2016/17, with the highest concentrations in northern urban areas like Hull, Salford and Manchester — pointing to a geographic pivot in BTL activity and warning of a two-tier investment market.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Buy-to-Let, Tax, Market Trends, Regulations & Compliance
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A senior estate agent argues the UK's BTL sector is in structural retreat under cumulative regulatory and tax pressure, while simultaneously identifying a growing cohort of wealthy older renters who may rationally prefer renting over ownership — potentially reshaping both supply and demand in the PRS.

Tags: Regulations & Compliance, Renters' Rights Act, Section 21, Section 24, Buy-to-Let, Tax, Stamp Duty, Capital Gains Tax, EPC / Energy Efficiency, HMO, Market Trends
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Knight Frank has revised UK house price growth down to 1.5% for 2025 citing geopolitical headwinds and elevated swap rates, while raising longer-term forecasts above 5% for 2030 on anticipated political change. Rental forecasts are trimmed but upward pressure is expected to persist due to the Renters' Rights Act reducing landlord supply.

Tags: Market Trends, Mortgages, Renters' Rights Act, Rental Yield, Regulations & Compliance, Stamp Duty, Tax
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UK residential transactions fell 41% year-on-year in March 2026, primarily reflecting the base-effect of the March 2025 stamp duty rush rather than a structural collapse; however, estate agent sales turnover rates have also declined, pointing to a genuinely slower conversion environment. Monthly trends and five-year averages suggest underlying stability, but market sentiment remains cautious amid mortgage rate volatility and geopolitical uncertainty.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Market Trends, Regulations & Compliance
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Stamp duty specialist SCA Tax recommends reintroducing Multiple Dwellings Relief and creating targeted stamp duty reductions for vacant properties and refurbishments to boost investment activity. This could significantly reduce acquisition costs for property investors while increasing government revenue through higher transaction volumes.

Tags: Stamp Duty, Tax, Investment Strategy, Regulations & Compliance, EPC / Energy Efficiency
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Chancellor Rachel Reeves is expected to implement major property tax reforms in the Autumn Budget to address a £20-40bn fiscal shortfall, including potential Stamp Duty restructuring, mansion taxes, CGT on high-value main residences, and National Insurance on rental income. These changes could fundamentally reshape UK residential property investment returns and market dynamics.

Tags: Tax, Stamp Duty, Market Trends, Buy-to-Let, Investment Strategy, Regulations & Compliance
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Frequently Asked Questions

How much stamp duty do I pay on a buy-to-let property?
Buy-to-let properties attract the standard SDLT rates plus a 5% surcharge (from October 2024) on the entire purchase price. For a £300,000 property, the total SDLT including the surcharge would be approximately £19,500. Use our SDLT Calculator for an exact figure.
Do first-time buyers pay stamp duty on investment properties?
First-time buyer relief only applies to properties you intend to live in as your main residence. If you purchase a buy-to-let as a first-time buyer, you pay the standard SDLT rates plus the additional property surcharge — no relief applies.
When did the stamp duty surcharge increase to 5%?
The additional property surcharge increased from 3% to 5% on 31 October 2024, as announced in the Autumn Budget. This applies to all completions on or after that date for second homes and buy-to-let purchases.