Stamp Duty Land Tax overview
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Stamp Duty

What you pay, when you pay it, and how the bands, reliefs and surcharges interact on UK new-build purchases. Plain English, with worked examples and a quick calculator.

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What it is

What is Stamp Duty Land Tax?

Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) is a tax paid by the buyer on residential property purchases in England and Northern Ireland. It is calculated in bands, applied to the portion of the price that falls within each band, and paid to HMRC within 14 days of completion through your solicitor.

Scotland uses a separate system called Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT). Wales uses Land Transaction Tax (LTT). The bands and rates differ in each jurisdiction; this page covers SDLT only.

The amount you pay depends on three things: the price you pay, whether you are a first-time buyer, and whether you already own another property. A 2% surcharge also applies if you are not a UK resident at the time of completion.

Estimated total SDLT£15,000On a £500,000 purchase, main residence.
Standard / FTB SDLT£15,000
Buyer typestandard

Indicative only. England and Northern Ireland. Always confirm with your solicitor or tax adviser before exchange.

Standard residential bands

Current standard SDLT rates

These rates apply to the portion of the purchase price that falls within each band. They apply to your main residence and assume you are a UK resident replacing or acquiring a single home.

Portion of priceSDLT rate
Up to £125,0000%
£125,001 to £250,0002%
£250,001 to £925,0005%
£925,001 to £1,500,00010%
Above £1,500,00012%

Rates change at fiscal events. Always verify with HMRC or your solicitor before committing to a transaction.

Reliefs and surcharges

How reliefs and surcharges work

First-time buyer relief

If you and any joint buyer are both buying your first ever home, no SDLT is due on the first £425,000. A 5% rate applies to the portion between £425,001 and £625,000. If the price exceeds £625,000, relief is lost entirely and standard rates apply.

Additional property surcharge (3%)

If, on completion, you own another residential property anywhere in the world and you are not replacing your main residence, a 3% surcharge applies on top of the standard SDLT. This affects most second-home and buy-to-let purchases. There are specific reliefs for replacing a main residence within the relevant window.

Non-resident surcharge (2%)

If you have not been present in the UK for at least 183 days in the 12 months before completion, a further 2% applies. This stacks on top of the standard rates and the additional property surcharge where relevant. International investors should factor this in early.

When SDLT is due

Within 14 days of completion. Your solicitor submits the SDLT return and pays HMRC on your behalf, then bills you. SDLT cannot be financed; it must come from cash on completion alongside your deposit and legal fees.

Worked examples

Three realistic scenarios

Indicative figures using current bands and reliefs. Always confirm with your solicitor before exchange.

First-time buyer at £450,000

£0 to £425,000 at 0%£0
£425,001 to £450,000 at 5%£1,250
Total SDLT£1,250

Full first-time buyer relief applies because the price is under £625,000.

Family home at £700,000 (main residence, UK resident)

£0 to £125,000 at 0%£0
£125,001 to £250,000 at 2%£2,500
£250,001 to £700,000 at 5%£22,500
Total SDLT£25,000

Standard residential bands. No surcharge.

Investor at £600,000 (additional property, non-UK resident)

£0 to £125,000 at 0%£0
£125,001 to £250,000 at 2%£2,500
£250,001 to £600,000 at 5%£17,500
3% additional property surcharge on £600,000£18,000
2% non-resident surcharge on £600,000£12,000
Total SDLT£50,000

Surcharges stack on top of the standard SDLT calculation.

Getting proper advice

Where to get advice

This page is a guide, not legal or tax advice. SDLT outcomes depend on personal circumstances, ownership history, residency status, and how the transaction is structured. Before you exchange, your solicitor will confirm the exact figure on your SDLT return. For complex cases (corporate buyers, mixed-use property, multiple dwellings relief), a qualified tax adviser is the right call.

We work with a panel of specialist solicitors who handle new-build conveyancing every day, and a tax network for non-resident and corporate buyers. Both introductions are free.

Solicitor introductionMortgage calculator

Disclaimer: SDLT rates, thresholds and reliefs change at fiscal events. The figures on this page are provided for guidance only and should not be relied on for a specific transaction. Always verify with HMRC or a qualified adviser before exchange.

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