Property

Stamp Duty Calculator UK 2026/27

Calculate Stamp Duty Land Tax (England & NI), Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (Scotland), and Land Transaction Tax (Wales). First-time buyer relief, additional property surcharge, and non-resident surcharge all included.

Where in the UK?
Buyer type
Stamp duty to pay£0

How UK stamp duty works in 2026/27

Stamp duty in the UK is not a single tax. It is three separate progressive taxes operating in parallel across the three parts of Great Britain: Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) in England and Northern Ireland, Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) in Scotland, and Land Transaction Tax (LTT) in Wales. Each has its own bands, its own thresholds, and its own surcharges. The calculator above lets you switch between them and applies the correct rules automatically.

All three systems share a common shape. For a property of price P, the tax is calculated band-by-band: for each band (bᵢ, rᵢ) the portion of the price that falls within that band is taxed at the band's rate. The first band starts at zero and is always zero-rated, so cheap properties pay nothing. Above the zero-rated threshold the rate steps up progressively, with the highest band catching the top portion of any very expensive property.

The 2026/27 SDLT bands — England and Northern Ireland

Price bandRate
£0 – £125,0000%
£125,001 – £250,0002%
£250,001 – £925,0005%
£925,001 – £1,500,00010%
Above £1,500,00012%

So a £400,000 standard purchase pays 0% on the first £125,000, 2% on the next £125,000 (=£2,500), and 5% on the remaining £150,000 (=£7,500). Total SDLT: £10,000.

First-time buyer relief

First-time buyers in England and Northern Ireland get enhanced relief on properties priced up to £500,000. They pay 0% on the first £300,000 and 5% on the portion from £300,000 to £500,000. Above £500,000 the relief disappears entirely and standard rates apply — this is the cliff edge that catches first-time buyers of more expensive homes.

Scotland offers a parallel relief: first-time buyers pay no LBTT on the first £175,000 of properties up to £600,000. Wales has no first-time buyer relief on LTT.

Additional property surcharge

Buy a second home, a buy-to-let, or any property that is not a replacement for your main residence and you pay an extra surcharge on top of every band. As of 2026/27 the surcharges are:

  • England & NI (SDLT): +5%
  • Scotland (LBTT): +6%
  • Wales (LTT): +4%

That surcharge applies to each band — so a £400,000 additional-property purchase in England pays 5% on the £0-£125k band, 7% on the £125k-£250k band, 10% on the £250k-£925k band, and so on. The calculator applies this automatically when you select "Additional property".

Non-UK resident surcharge

Since 1 April 2021, non-UK residents buying residential property in England or Northern Ireland pay an additional 2% SDLT surcharge. Scotland applies a 4% non-resident surcharge on LBTT. Wales has no non-resident surcharge on LTT. This is applied on top of both the standard rate and the additional-property surcharge. Tick the "Non-UK resident" box in the calculator to model this.

The Scottish LBTT bands — 2026/27

Price bandRate
£0 – £145,0000%
£145,001 – £250,0002%
£250,001 – £325,0005%
£325,001 – £750,00010%
Above £750,00012%

The Welsh LTT bands — 2026/27

Price bandRate
£0 – £225,0000%
£225,001 – £400,0006%
£400,001 – £750,0007.5%
£750,001 – £1,500,00010%
Above £1,500,00012%

Worked example — first-time buyer in Leeds, £280,000

A first-time buyer purchasing a £280,000 home in England falls entirely within the relief zone. They pay 0% on the first £300,000, so the entire £280,000 is at 0%. Total SDLT: £0. The same purchase by a moving-home buyer would pay 0% on £125k, 2% on £125k (=£2,500), and 5% on £30k (=£1,500), totalling £4,000 — a £4,000 difference that the relief is designed to deliver.

What this calculator does not cover

This calculator models the standard residential SDLT, LBTT, and LTT regimes for the 2024/25, 2025/26, and 2026/27 tax years. It does not cover commercial property rates, non-residential SDLT, mixed-use transactions, multiple dwellings relief, transactions involving linked purchases, or the special rules for shared ownership purchases. If your situation involves any of these, you need a solicitor or tax adviser rather than a web calculator.

The data backing this tool is sourced from the official publications listed on our methodology page and is updated within one week of any rate change announced by HM Treasury, Revenue Scotland, or the Welsh Revenue Authority.

Frequently asked questions

What is Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)?

SDLT is a tax paid by the buyer when purchasing residential property in England or Northern Ireland. The amount scales with the purchase price through a system of progressive bands, similar to income tax. Scotland has its own equivalent called Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) and Wales has Land Transaction Tax (LTT).

How much is stamp duty for a first-time buyer?

In England and Northern Ireland, first-time buyers pay no SDLT on the first £300,000 of a property priced up to £500,000, then 5% on the portion from £300,000 to £500,000. Above £500,000 the relief disappears and standard rates apply. In Scotland, first-time buyers pay no LBTT on the first £175,000 of properties up to £600,000. Wales does not offer a first-time buyer relief on LTT.

What is the additional property surcharge?

If you are buying a second home, a buy-to-let, or any property that is not a replacement for your main residence, an additional surcharge is added to every SDLT, LBTT or LTT band. The surcharge is 5% in England/NI, 6% in Scotland, and 4% in Wales. It is payable in addition to the standard rate on each band.

Who pays the non-UK resident surcharge?

Since 1 April 2021, non-UK residents buying residential property in England or Northern Ireland pay an additional 2% SDLT surcharge on top of standard rates and the additional-property surcharge. Scotland has a 4% non-resident LBTT surcharge. Wales does not operate a non-resident surcharge on LTT.

When does stamp duty have to be paid?

SDLT, LBTT and LTT must be paid within 14 days of completion of the property purchase. In practice, your conveyancer or solicitor usually files the return and pays the tax on your behalf on completion day, then collects the amount from you.

Are there any properties exempt from stamp duty?

Yes. Transactions below the £0 threshold, certain transfers following divorce or dissolution of a civil partnership, transfers under a will, and some caravans or houseboats are exempt. Some purchases may qualify for multiple dwellings relief or other reliefs — these are not modelled by this calculator and require professional advice.

Why does my Scottish calculation differ from my friend's English one for the same price?

Because the three UK regions have completely separate tax systems with different bands, thresholds, and surcharges. A £400,000 first-time buyer purchase in England triggers 5% on £100,000 (£5,000 tax), while in Scotland the same purchase triggers LBTT at 0% on £175k, 2% on £75k, 5% on £75k, and 10% on £75k — totalling a different figure. Always check the calculator with the region selected where you are actually buying.

Important: All figures are for educational purposes only and do not constitute financial advice. Always consult a qualified professional.

Last updated: 2026-07-17 · Next review: 2027-04-06 ·Read the full methodology.