PolicyLens

Reform UK - Housing tax

Cut stamp duty below GBP 750,000

Set residential stamp duty to zero below GBP 750,000 in England and Northern Ireland.

Last updated: May 2026.

Read the policy-specific methodology note

Tax baseline

The costable scenario follows Reform's 2024 Contract: no SDLT below GBP 750,000, 2% from GBP 750,000 to GBP 1.5m, and 4% above GBP 1.5m.

  • Applies to England and Northern Ireland.
  • Most transactions fall below GBP 750,000.
  • Rates above GBP 750,000 also fall.

Core trade-offs

Buyers face lower transaction tax, but sellers may capture part of the gain through higher prices. The Exchequer loses revenue and demand rises without adding supply.

  • Buyers and sellers gain from lower tax.
  • Treasury loses property-transaction receipts.
  • Prices may rise where supply is tight.

Illustrative fiscal impact

+GBP 4.0bn to +GBP 12.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 7.5bn.

  • Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
  • GBP 750k threshold is the main scale marker.
  • Gross costs and receipt offsets are separated in methodology.
  • Behaviour and pass-through widen the range.
  • This is not an official costing.

Economic impact by 2027-28

  • Jobs: Housing-market activity may support estate agents and removals, but no supply guarantee exists.
  • Wages: No direct wage effect; wealth gains accrue mainly to property owners and movers.
  • Prices: Likely raises prices in supply-constrained areas if demand increases.
  • GDP / productivity: Could improve mobility, but output gain is limited without housing supply reform.

Assessment

Lower stamp duty can improve mobility, but a very high zero-rate threshold is mainly a property-market tax cut. In tight housing markets, part of the benefit is likely capitalised into prices. The policy is fiscally costly unless paired with serious supply reform or another property-tax base.

Confidence: Medium-low. HMRC ready-reckoners help, but transaction volumes and price capitalisation make large threshold changes uncertain.

Main risks

  • Price capitalisation: Sellers may capture some tax relief through higher sale prices.
  • Regressive gains: Higher-value homeowners and movers gain more than renters or non-movers.
  • Supply gap: Demand rises without new supply can worsen affordability pressures.

Safeguards

  • Pair with binding housing-supply reform.
  • Publish regional price and buyer-incidence analysis.
  • Consider replacing SDLT with annual property taxation.

Academic evidence

UK government evidence

HM Revenue and Customs, 2026

Illustrative tax changes

HMRC ready-reckoners show large revenue effects from income-tax, NI, VAT, fuel-duty and corporation-tax changes.

Primary fiscal scale anchor.

Direct effects of illustrative tax changes (2026)

Reform UK, 2024

Reform tax detail

The Contract specifies thresholds, duties and business-tax proposals while claiming annual cost and saving totals.

Defines broad current tax pledges.

Our Contract with You (2024)

Sources

Other Reform UK policies

PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.