A land transaction means a transaction where the legal title to a
property changes hands, such as a sale, transfer of equity or gift
(remortgages where there is no transfer are liable for duty) and the
amount of duty payable depends on the actual consideration (purchase
price) paid, the amount due being a percentage of the consideration,
between 0% - 5%.
Stamp Duty Land Tax Thresholds
Duty
is charged at a different rate depending on the amount of consideration
paid for the property. The table below shows what rates are payable:
£0 - £125,000 0% >£125,000 - £250,000 1% >£250,000 - £500,000 3% >£500,000 4%
From 06 April 2011 a new higher rate of 5% for transactions worth over £1,000,000 will be introduced.
First Time Buyer Relief
For
transactions completed between 25 March 2010 and 24 March 2012
inclusive, where the purchaser is a first time buyer and the price is
£250,000 or less, the purchaser will be able to claim full relief from
duty. An SDLT return will still need to be filed and an "SDLT-5"
certificate obtained.
Any individual (as opposed to a company) who
has never owned a property, either alone or jointly, anywhere in the
world, is a first time buyer and will qualify for relief. A person who
has owned a property in the name of his company would not qualify. Note
that a person who buys a property in England or Wales but was previously
resident in another country and owned a property there would not
qualify. A person who owned a property with a spouse or partner but as
part of any divorce settlement or separation agreement did not retain
any interest or any of the equity would also fail to qualify.
Where
two people are buying jointly and one has never owned a property but
the other has, there will be no entitlement to relief for either party.
Disadvantaged Area Relief
Certain
areas of the country are designated "disadvantaged areas" for the
purposes of stamp duty. In these areas full relief from duty can be
claimed on transactions between £125,000 - £150,000. As with any claim
for relief, an SDLT return will need to be filed.
To enable you to
check if an area qualifies for relief you can use the postcode search
tool on the HMRC website. Just use the search box on the home page and
search "stamp duty land tax". Beware however that this tool is not
definitive since areas are split by council ward rather than postcode
and the postcode search may not be accurate for properties that are on
the border of a disadvantaged area. If you're not sure, call HMRC.
Transfers of Equity
Any
transfer of land which results in at least one of the original owners
remaining on the title following completion is known as a transfer of
equity. These types of transaction do attract duty and the consideration
on which it is based is the sum of any money paid to an outgoing owner
or by an incoming one and the amount of liability for any mortgage that
an incoming or remaining owner takes on. The two examples below
illustrate this:
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