Stamp Duty receipts fall as first-time buyers relief kicks in together with drop in transactions and Welsh devolution

The government haul from Stamp Duty Land Tax has fallen by more than at any previous point in the last decade.

Total receipts, including from commercial property, went down by 5% to £15,560m in the 2018/2019 financial year, but HMRC said that if the effects of the first-time buyers’ relief and devolution to Wales were discounted, the fall would have been under 2%. The decrease also reflected a drop in transactions which HMRC put at 8% over the year.

SDLT receipts in England were £11,840m, down £715m (6%) from the previous financial year. The decrease in Northern Ireland was also 6%, resulting in receipts of £80m.

London accounted for the most SDLT revenue – £4,545m, which was 38% of the total.

Total residential SDLT receipts decreased by 10% (£905m) to £8,370m, with residential transactions standing at slightly over 1m.

Non-residential receipts also fell, by 2%.

Transactions where buyers had to pay the 3% surcharge amounted to 230,600 in number, a decrease of 9% from the previous year, bringing in £3,810m, down 6%.

There were 218,900 first-time buyer transactions where there was relief from Stamp Duty. These buyers saved an estimated £521m in what was the first full tax year of the relief.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/835094/ASTP-Release-Bulletin-1819.pdf

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