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property · 7 min read

UK Stamp Duty (SDLT) Explained: 2025/26 Rates, First-Time Buyer Relief, Second-Home Surcharge

By: CalculatorZone editorsPublished: 1 April 2025Updated: 1 April 2025

Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) is what you pay the government when you buy property in England or Northern Ireland. Wales uses Land Transaction Tax; Scotland uses Land and Buildings Transaction Tax. The rules below are for England + NI and reflect the 1 April 2025 changes confirmed in the Autumn Budget 2024.

How SDLT is calculated

SDLT is tiered: you pay nothing on the first part of the price, then a percentage on each higher band — like income tax. There's no cliff edge. One house at £260,000 pays SDLT on the £10,000 that falls above the £250,000 band, not on the full £260,000.

Standard residential rates (main home)

SDLT main residence — from 1 April 2025
Portion of priceRateMax SDLT in this band
£0 – £125,0000%£0
£125,001 – £250,0002%£2,500
£250,001 – £925,0005%£33,750
£925,001 – £1.5m10%£57,500
Over £1.5m12%

First-time-buyer relief

If it's your first home and you'll live in it, you qualify for FTB relief. From April 2025:

  • Purchases up to £300,000 — no SDLT
  • Purchases £300,001 – £500,000 — pay 5% on the portion above £300,000
  • Purchases above £500,000 — you lose the relief entirely and pay standard rates on the whole price

If you are deciding between two homes, compare the tax difference alongside the mortgage payment rather than treating SDLT in isolation. The Mortgage Affordability Calculator and the first-time buyer mortgage guide give the wider context.

+5% additional-property surcharge

If this purchase leaves you owning two or more residential properties at the end of the day of completion, you pay an extra 5% on top of standard rates (raised from 3% to 5% on 31 October 2024). This hits second homes, buy-to-let, and buyers who haven't sold their previous main home by completion.

Additional-property rates (effective bands)
Portion of priceStandardWith surcharge
£0 – £125,0000%5%
£125,001 – £250,0002%7%
£250,001 – £925,0005%10%
£925,001 – £1.5m10%15%
Over £1.5m12%17%
If you sell your previous main home within 3 years of completing on the new one, you can claim the surcharge back from HMRC.

Non-UK resident surcharge

Non-UK-resident buyers of residential property pay an additional 2% on top of every band — stackable with the 5% additional-property surcharge if applicable. You count as non-resident if you've been in the UK fewer than 183 days in the 12 months before completion.

Worked examples

Example 1: First-time buyer at £275,000
BandPortionRateSDLT
Up to £300,000£275,0000%£0
TOTAL£0
Example 2: Main home purchase at £425,000 (not FTB)
BandPortionRateSDLT
£0 – £125,000£125,0000%£0
£125,001 – £250,000£125,0002%£2,500
£250,001 – £425,000£175,0005%£8,750
TOTAL£11,250
Example 3: Second home at £350,000
BandPortionRateSDLT
£0 – £125,000£125,0005%£6,250
£125,001 – £250,000£125,0007%£8,750
£250,001 – £350,000£100,00010%£10,000
TOTAL£25,000

Official sources and related reads

Use the Stamp Duty Calculator to run your exact figures — it handles FTB relief, the surcharge, and non-resident rules automatically.