BREAKING PROPERTY NEWS – 05/10/2021

Estate Agent Networking Breaking News

Daily bite-sized proptech and real estate news in partnership with Proptech-X. Today, Stanton looks at the Standard Duty Land Tax and Propertymark.

 

STANDARD DUTY LAND TAX – WILL IT ACT AS A BRAKE ON THE HOUSING MARKET?

There has been a lot of recent debate about stamp duty or SDLT, which stands for Stamp Duty Land Tax, levied by HMRC on land and property purchases.

With the Chancellor of the exchequer freezing the normal banding of the SDLT for property or land transactions completing at £500,000 or less, it has been estimated that close to a million buyers may have in some way gained from paying no or less SDLT.

In case anyone does not know what, the rates are in England as of the 1st of October 2021, they returned to normal.

Normal being, Zero tax up to £125,000, 2% tax on the next £125,000 – the band of £125,001 to £250,000, 5% tax on the next £675,000 – the band £250,001 to £925,000, 10% tax on the next £575,000 – the band £925,001 to £1.5M, 12% on anything above this.

If you are a first-time buyer in England, there is Zero SDLT on purchases up to £300,000. But you pay 5% on the band £300,001 to £500,000, however if the purchase is over £500,000 there is no relief and first-time buyers have to pay SDLT the same as a normal buyer.

If you are an investment buyer, a person buying a second home, or several homes, the SDLT payable is the same as the ‘Normal’ rate quoted above, plus 3%. So instead of being Zero tax up to £125,000, 3% is applicable, and 8% not 5% up to £500,000, and 13% not 10% up to £1.5M, and 15% not 12% on anything above this.

If you are a buyer from outside of the UK, buying in England as an investment you have to add another 2% in all the categories that a normal investment buyer pays, so you will be paying 5%, 7%, 10%, 15% and 17% depending on the purchase price.

Why all of this matters is that depending on where you live, and the value of your home, SDLT can be a real factor. For example in Middlesbrough the average house price is £167,000, in London is £695K. So at £167,000 a first-time buyer is paying no stamp duty, and a normal buyer is only paying £840. At £695,000 a first time-buyer gets no relief and will pay the same as a normal buyer, £24,750.

If you look closer, the recent higher taxation for non-domicile buyers who look to buy Prime property in say London at £5M will now pay £613,750, so will that dampen the actual sale prices being achieved. Though of course we can always rely on some to game any taxation system, such as an ex-prime minister and his barrister wife who recently were shown to have swerved a £312,000 SDLT bill.

All forms of property and land taxation are ‘unfair’ at the margins, there will always be winners and losers. Removing some of them altogether as the Chancellor did, with a known end date was always going to cause a stampede. With possible austerity now coming into view, fuelled by inflation and increased taxation, will the full return of SDLT in all its forms pour water on the over heated housing market.

 

PROPERTYMARK PUTS ITS FULL WEIGHT BEHIND THE ENDANGERED PRS LANDLORD

Propertymark has broken ranks and rigidly stated that it backs the plight of landlords in the private residential sector, who are being taxed and regulated out of existence. But most immediately are taking the brunt of the rent arrears caused by the pandemic.

Mark Hayward policy adviser for the organisation commented that, ‘The PRS supports five-million households in the UK and is an important provider of homes against a backdrop of an overwhelmed social housing system … at the moment, the risks associated with being a landlord are incredibly high and the financial help for tenants and landlords struggling under the weight of accumulated Covid-related debt is inadequate.’

Though there are no verified figures it is though that over 500,000 plus tenancies are in arrears at present, which could scale up to over 750,000 by the end of the year.

Propertymark is lobbying the government to think carefully about a mechanism such as a loan scheme to stop a mass exodus of private landlords, many of whom only own one investment property and utilise it as a way of generating income or as part of a pension strategy.

If there is a sudden move by landlords to divest themselves of rental properties which then pass into the general housing stock, this will bring even greater pressure on the government who are already behind in the social housing programme.

Andrew Stanton

CEO & Founder Proptech-PR. Proptech Real Estate Influencer, Executive Editor of Estate Agent Networking. Leading PR consultancy in Proptech & Real Estate.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Annual house price growth slows in June

The latest Nationwide House Price Index for June 2026 shows that: House prices fell by -0.0% between May 2026 and June 2026. Annual house price growth increased to 2.2% in June 2026, up from 1.7% in May 2026. The average UK house price for June 2026 now stands at £277,484, down slightly from £278,024 in…
Read More
Breaking News

Nationwide House Price Index May 2026

UK annual house price growth picked up to 3.0% in April, from 2.2% in March House prices were up 0.4% month on month Headlines Apr-26 Mar-26 Monthly Index* 554.8 552.7 Monthly Change* 0.4% 0.9% Annual Change 3.0% 2.2% Average Price (not seasonally adjusted) £278,880 £277,186 * Seasonally adjusted figure (note that monthly % changes are…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 30/6/26

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   8% of commercial real estate investors and owners have started AI pilots – the reasons why most fail Only 5% of CRE operators achieve most of their AI program goals According to JLL’s 2025 Global Real Estate Technology Survey of more than 1,500 senior…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

What the average asking price buys across Great Britain

New analysis from the UK’s largest property platform Rightmove reveals what buyers can get for the current average asking price of a home, at approximately £378,000 The analysis shows that in some areas, buyers can find five-bedroom homes for around the national average asking price, whereas in other areas it is only a flat or studio that buyers can afford There are clear…
Read More
Breaking News

3 in 5 homes listed for sale since January are still on the market

Higher mortgage rates and political uncertainty hits housing sales with three in five homes since January still searching for a buyer   Three in five homes listed for sale since January are still on the market – with sales agreed over the last 4 weeks -7% lower than last year Buyer demand has also fallen…
Read More
Breaking News

Mortgage approvals down 11% in May

The latest mortgage approval data from the Bank of England show that: –   Mortgage approvals on house purchases for May sat at 56,205 down (-14.9%) from 66,034 seen in April. Approvals are down (-10.8%) when compared to the 62,980 seen in May 2025. This annual decline was expected due to wider political and economic uncertainty;…
Read More