Four in five homebuyers to pay more stamp duty from April 

The stamp duty changes will boost stamp duty receipts by over £1.1bn annually.

Related topics:  First-time buyer,  Stamp duty
Rozi Jones | Editor, Financial Reporter
19th February 2025
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"Stamp duty is a big tax on home movers in southern England where affordability problems are already a major challenge."
- Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla

The cost of buying a home will increase for the majority of home buyers in England and Northern Ireland from April when the stamp duty relief introduced in the 2022 mini budget ends and reverts to previous rates, analysis from Zoopla shows.

Overall Zoopla estimates that these changes will raise an extra £1.1bn a year in stamp duty for the government.

From the 1st April of 2025, four in every five (83%) homeowners will pay stamp duty on buying a main residence, up from 49% today, as the 2% rate between £125,000 and £250,000 returns. Less than a fifth of homeowners (17%) will pay no stamp duty on purchases below £125,000.

This means that the 49% of homeowner purchases over £250,000 will pay an extra £2,500 in stamp duty from April. The 33% of buyers purchasing between £125,000 and £250,000 will pay 2% on the purchase price up to a maximum of £2,500.  Zoopla estimates this will generate an additional £900m in stamp duty.

The biggest jump in buyers paying stamp duty will be in the West Midlands where 66% more sales will pay from April, followed by 55% in the East Midlands and 50% in the North West.

The proportion of first-time buyers paying stamp duty doubles

First-time buyers will pay stamp duty on purchases over £300,000 from April, meaning three in five (58%) will avoid this extra cost of buying. The number of first-time buyers liable to pay stamp duty will be the lowest in the North East (2%), Yorkshire and the Humber (3%), Northern Ireland (5%) and the North West (5%).

However, the proportion of first-time buyers liable to pay stamp duty will double to 42% from April, hitting London and South East buyers in the £300,000 and £625,000 range the hardest, with costs of up to £15,000 per purchase. Buying at £350,000 will cost £2,500 per purchase, up from £0 today. Buying a £500,000 home will cost £10,000 in stamp duty, up from £3,750 today and buying at £550,000 will jump from £6,250 to £15,000.

Zoopla estimates this will generate an additional £200m in stamp duty.

Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla, commented: “Stamp duty has become a big source of tax revenue, approaching £10bn a year for the government. The reduction in tax reliefs from April will see more home buyers paying stamp duty.

“Existing homeowners will pay up to £2,500 more for each purchase across a large number of sales. The average seller has made £60,000 in capital gains so there is flexibility to absorb this cost but buyers will expect to factor this extra cost into what they offer.

“It’s positive that most first-time buyers will still pay no stamp duty from April, but these changes hit those buying over £300,000 in southern England the most where buying costs are already high. This will reduce buying power and market activity at a local level.

“Stamp duty is a big tax on home movers in southern England where affordability problems are already a major challenge. The case for reforming stamp duty remains but the question is where to replace the multi-billion in annual tax revenues.”

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