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UK · 2025/26

Council Tax Calculator

Estimate your annual council tax bill by band and region for 2024/25. Calculate monthly payments and see how discounts such as single person or student exemptions affect your bill.

Last reviewed: 9 October 2025Source: HMRC / Welsh Revenue / Revenue Scotland
Council Tax Calculator · UKProperty & Housing

Rates & sources

SDLT/LTT/LBTT bands vary between England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Use the appropriate calculator.

Source: HMRC / Welsh Revenue / Revenue Scotland — figures refreshed at the start of each tax year.

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Full 2025/26 tax summary as a PDF

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When to use this calculator

  • Before buying, renting, refinancing, or reviewing a property investment.
  • When you want to compare cash flow, yield, growth, and ownership costs side by side.
  • When you need a fast estimate before speaking to an agent, lender, or adviser.
  • When you are assessing whether a rental property still makes financial sense after a mortgage rate change.
  • When you want to compare the total cost of renting against owning over a five- or ten-year horizon.

A realistic UK planning example

Use these sample inputs as a quick scenario test, then change one variable at a time to compare outcomes.

Council Tax Band

Band A

Region

England (average)

Discount or Exemption

None

After entering these figures, review annual council tax, monthly (10 payments) and weekly equivalent together rather than in isolation — each metric tells a different part of the story. Then rerun the tool with one input adjusted to see which variable has the biggest effect on all three outputs before you settle on a plan.

How to read your results

Annual Council Tax

Review this figure alongside your gross income so you can understand the true cost of deductions and plan around any thresholds before the tax year closes. If the figure looks higher than expected, check whether any pension or gift-aid contributions could reduce your taxable income.

Monthly (10 payments)

Use this metric to compare scenarios side by side and understand how changes in the key inputs drive the final outcome. If the figure surprises you, isolate one variable at a time and rerun the calculation to identify which assumption is responsible.

Weekly Equivalent

Use this metric to compare scenarios side by side and understand how changes in the key inputs drive the final outcome. If the figure surprises you, isolate one variable at a time and rerun the calculation to identify which assumption is responsible.

Method & assumptionsAuthoritative sources

This calculator estimates your council tax bill using 2024/25 average Band D rates by region: £2,171 for England (excluding London), £1,733 for London, £1,567 for Scotland, and £1,955 for Wales. These are national averages — your actual bill is set by your local authority and may differ materially from the figure shown. Other bands are calculated using the statutory band ratios: Band A is set at 6/9ths of Band D, rising in equal steps to Band H at twice the Band D rate. Discounts are applied as a multiplier to the gross annual figure before the monthly and weekly breakdowns are derived.

The monthly figure assumes the standard 10-instalment payment schedule used by most councils (April to January). If you pay over 12 months the monthly cost will be approximately 17% lower than shown. Weekly equivalent figures divide the annual total by 52 and are provided for budgeting convenience only — councils do not typically offer weekly payment arrangements. Note that council tax premiums (up to 300% in some areas for long-term empty homes) are not modelled here. Always refer to your latest council tax bill for the precise amount you owe.

Common mistakes

  • !Comparing rent and ownership costs without including taxes, fees, and maintenance.
  • !Using purchase price alone without testing the impact of financing or vacancy assumptions.
  • !Relying on yield or growth in isolation instead of reviewing the full property case.
  • !Forgetting Stamp Duty Land Tax (or its Scottish and Welsh equivalents), which can add thousands to the true cost of purchase.
  • !Using optimistic rental growth figures without also testing a flat or declining rent scenario to check downside resilience.

What to do next

  • Run a second scenario with a higher rate or lower rental yield to check downside resilience.
  • Compare the result with a buy-versus-rent or stamp duty calculator before making an offer.
  • Use the related guides below to understand agent fees, legal costs, and ongoing maintenance budgets.
  • If you are assessing a buy-to-let, check the gross yield against the net yield after mortgage interest, voids, and management fees.
  • Note down the key figures from this scenario to share with your solicitor or mortgage broker so they are working from the same assumptions.

Frequently asked

Council tax bands in England and Scotland are based on the estimated open market value of your property on 1 April 1991. Wales revalued its properties as at 1 April 2003. In England there are eight bands (A to H), with Band A covering properties valued up to £40,000 in 1991 and Band H covering those over £320,000. The Valuation Office Agency (VOA) in England and Wales, and Assessors in Scotland, set and maintain the valuations. You can challenge your band if you believe it is incorrect, particularly if similar neighbouring properties are in a lower band.

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