One in five home buyers now over the higher stamp duty threshold
Halifax has examined house prices and home sales in 2,132 postcode districts across England and Wales over the past five years with reference to the stamp duty thresholds. Halifax believes the current thresholds at which stamp duty is levied should be adjusted to reflect the significant rate of house price inflation seen over the past decade.Halifax calculates that over the past five years there has been a 281% rise in the number of home sales in England and Wales above the £250,000 threshold at which a 3% rate of stamp duty is levied. The number of residential property sales attracting at least 3% stamp duty has increased from 73,403 in 2001 to 279,408 in 2006.
Home buyers in these transactions were faced with a stamp duty bill of at least £7,500. In 2006, 19% of home buyers paid at least 3% stamp duty compared with 6% in 2001.
89% of the rise in stamp duty revenue over past five years driven by sales above £250,000
Total stamp duty revenue from residential property sales was £4.6bn in 2005/06, up 114% from the £2.1bn raised in 2000/01. 89% of the rise in the residential stamp duty take over the five years was due to an increase in the amount raised at the higher stamp duty bands (3% on sales between £250,000 and £500,000 and 4% above £500,000). Stamp duty revenue raised from sales of properties valued at more than £250,000 rose by 175% from £1.2bn in 2000/01 to £3.4bn in 2005/06. The higher stamp duty bands accounted for 74% of total residential stamp duty revenue in 2005/06 compared with 58% in 2000/01.
3.5 million properties valued above 3% stamp duty threshold
Halifax estimates that 3.5 million (19%) English and Welsh properties are now valued above the £250,000 stamp duty threshold; and 600,000 (3%) are valued above the £500,000 threshold. London and the South East account for 64% of homes valued above £250,000 and 77% of homes valued above the £500,000 threshold.
Four-fold rise in number of postcodes above the 3% stamp duty threshold
There has been a more than four-fold increase in the number of postcodes where the average house price is above the 3% stamp duty threshold. The average house price in 485 postcode districts (23%) in England and Wales is now above the £250,000 threshold, compared to 111 districts (5%) in 2001.
Biggest rise in home sales above 3% threshold in postcodes in West Wickham and Ilford
There are 206 postcode districts in England and Wales which have seen at least a 30 percentage point increase in the proportion of home sales above the 3% stamp threshold over the past five years. The largest increase has been in BR4 in West Wickham in London, up 60 percentage points from 19% of sales in 2001 to 79% in 2006. The next biggest increases were in IG4 in Ilford in London with a 59 percentage point increase and GL19 in Gloucester with a 55 percentage point rise.
Almost one in three postcode districts have more than one quarter of sales above the 3% stamp duty threshold
Sales above the 3% stamp duty threshold accounted for at least 25% of property sales in 667 (31%) postcode districts across England and Wales in 2006, compared with 181 (8%) districts in 2001. These include 71% of London postcode districts and 54% of postcode districts in the South East. All regions of England and Wales have at least 5% of postcode districts with more than 25% of home sales above the 3% stamp duty threshold.
SW7 and SW1W hardest hit by higher rates of stamp duty
SW7 in Kensington (98%) and SW1W in Sloane Square (97%) in London are the two postcode districts with the highest percentage of sales above the 3% stamp duty threshold. B94 in Solihull is the postcode district with the highest proportion of housing sales above the 3% threshold outside the south of England (78%), followed by NE20 near Newcastle upon Tyne (70%).
Average stamp duty bill at least triples in 374 postcode districts over past five years
The stamp duty payable on the average house sale has at least tripled in 18% (374) of postcode districts over the past five years, reflecting a shift in the average stamp duty rate from 1% to 3% in these districts. YO62 in York has seen the biggest increase with the average bill up 601% from £1,087 in 2001 to £7,620 in 2006. WN8 (585%) near Pemberton in the North West and TR26 (583%) in St Ives in the South West have seen the next biggest rises.