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Bigger stamp duty bills for some home buyers as discounts shrink

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Stamp duty discounts have shrunk, adding thousands of pounds to the costs paid by some home buyers.

The “nil rate” threshold for first-time buyers has reduced from £425,000 to £300,000 from Tuesday, and for home movers, the zero rate threshold has halved from £250,000 to £125,000. Stamp duty applies in England and Northern Ireland.

Bank of England figures released on Monday showed that the number of mortgage approvals made to home buyers – which are an indication of future lending – fell ahead of the stamp duty deadline.

Some 65,500 mortgage approvals for house purchases were recorded in February, which was around 600 lower than in January, the Bank’s Money and Credit report said. It was the lowest monthly figure recorded since August 2024.

Richard Donnell, executive director at property website Zoopla, said: “Mortgage approvals have slowed in the wake of the rush to beat the stamp duty deadline and are now recovering after the seasonal slowdown over December.

“We expect approvals to continue recovering towards 80,000 a month as the market returns to normal. Zoopla’s latest data shows that sales agreed are up 5% over the last year with more sales agreed driving continued demand for mortgages to fund sales.”

Mr Donnell has previously suggested that home buyers will expect to reflect extra stamp duty costs in their offers, typically looking to “split” the cost with the seller.

In February, Zoopla calculated that the proportion of first-time buyers in England and Northern Ireland who will need to pay stamp duty will double from April.

The firm estimated the share of first-time buyers paying the tax will jump from 21% to 42%.

The proportion of existing homeowners buying a new home as their main residence who will be liable to pay stamp duty will increase from 49% to 83%, according to Zoopla.

Examples of stamp duty changes
(PA Graphics)

HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) figures released last week showed a surge in sales going through as buyers rushed to beat the deadline.

An estimated 108,250 home sales took place in February – 28% higher than February 2024 and 13% higher than January 2025.

Credit information company Experian has also released data showing the number of mortgage applications in the final quarter of 2024 jumped by nearly a third (32%) compared with the same period in 2023.

John Webb, a consumer affairs expert at Experian UK and Ireland, said: “Our data suggests that consumers have been quite resilient, with a significant increase in mortgage applications in the last quarter of 2024 compared to the same period in 2023.

“However, rising house prices in some areas of the country have forced first-time buyers to look further afield to get on to the property ladder.”