Stamp Duty bill in London 356 greater than East Midlands 

Published on

Stamp Duty on an average priced property in London is 356 times higher than an average priced property in East Midlands, accordingly to analysis from Coventry Building Society.

While the average Stamp Duty bill in London is currently 356 times higher than East Midlands, the average property price is only 2.11 times higher – making the tax bill disproportionally higher than the home.

In 2014 the Stamp Duty on an average priced property in London was 17.6 times higher than an average priced property in East Midlands – indicating that the tax disparity between London and East Midlands has rocketed under the new thresholds.

The regional breakdown is as follows:

Area

Average house price

Stamp Duty on an
average priced home

North East

£165,366

North West

£215,791

Yorkshire & The Humber

£213,264

East Midlands

£250,818

£40

West Midlands

£253,519

£175

East of England

£350,728

£5,036

London

£535,597

£14,279

South East

£393,417

£7,170

South West

£328,413

£3,920

England

£309,616

£2,980

Those buying an average priced property in North East, North West, Yorkshire & The Humber won’t need to pay any Stamp Duty before March 2025 – when the current Stamp Duty thresholds are in place until.

Homebuyers currently pay Stamp Duty if their home costs most than £250,000. In March 2025 this will drop to £125,000.

Further analysis shows how Stamp Duty bills will increase on average priced home in each region when the new thresholds commence:

Area

Stamp Duty
on average
priced home
now

Stamp Duty
on average
priced home
in March 25

North East

£807

North West

£1,815

Yorshire & The Humber

£1,765

East Midlands

£40

£2,540

West Midlands

£175

£2,675

East of England

£5,036

£7,536

London

£14,279

£16,749

South East

£7,170

£9,670

South West

£3,920

£6,420

England

£2,980

£5,480

Jonathan Stinton, Head of Mortgage Relations at Coventry Building Society, said: “The rumours have started swirling that Stamp Duty changes are on the horizon, with announcements speculated to be made during the Autumn Statement. The numbers show these changes can’t come quickly enough – at the minute some people are paying up to 356 times more tax on something which is only twice as valuable, that’s clearly flawed.

“A lot more work needs to be done to make sure buyers in the capital aren’t being hit with a bill which is disproportionately high. Homebuyers across the country aren’t being treated equally, and that needs to be addressed.”

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

Latest articles

L&G sells surveying arm to Beach Equity

Legal & General has agreed to sell its long-standing surveying division to Beach Equity,...

Santander makes third round of November rate cuts as pricing drifts lower

Santander will cut a wide swathe of its residential and buy-to-let pricing next week,...

Later life lending must become ‘mainstream priority’, following FCA reform speech

Will Hale, chief executive of Key Advice & Air, has urged the mortgage industry...

FRP expands with acquisition of Arc & Co

FRP has strengthened its presence in the real-estate finance market with the acquisition of...

Metro Bank cuts rates and returns to 80% buy-to-let lending

Metro Bank has made further cuts across its residential, near-prime and buy-to-let product ranges,...

Latest publication

Other news

L&G sells surveying arm to Beach Equity

Legal & General has agreed to sell its long-standing surveying division to Beach Equity,...

Getting to know you: James Travers, Darlington Building Society

Name: James Travers Age: 38 Location: Teesside Firm: Darlington Building Society Education: CeMAP Specialty: Self-build Interests: The three Fs...

Landlords defy the doom – the buy-to-let bounce-back

While the Bank of England recently voted to hold the interest rate at 4%,...