First Time Buyer Stamp Duty on £425,000

First time buyers pay just £6,250 SDLT on a £425,000 property — FTB relief is pre-applied below. Adjust if needed.

✓ HMRC 2025/26 rates ✓ England, Scotland & Wales ✓ Free — no signup ✓ GOV.UK verified

2026 Rates Updated March

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£425,000
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April 2025 Threshold Change The nil-rate threshold for standard purchases returned to £125,000 from 1 April 2025.

Enter your details and click Calculate Stamp Duty to see your SDLT, effective rate, and band-by-band breakdown.

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Your SDLT Result
Stamp Duty Land Tax
£0
Effective rate: 0%
Effective rate 0%
Monthly equivalent
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Taxable portion
Property price
Filing deadline 14 days from completion

For guidance only. Always verify SDLT liability with HMRC or a solicitor. Rates correct as of April 2025.

Stamp Duty on a £425,000 Property (2026)

£425,000 was previously the maximum price at which first-time buyers paid zero stamp duty under the temporary thresholds. Since 1 April 2025, the FTB nil-rate band has returned to £300,000, meaning first-time buyers at £425,000 now pay £6,250 in SDLT — a significant change.

SDLT Breakdown at £425,000 by Buyer Type

Band First Time Buyer Standard Additional / BTL
£0 – £125,000£0£0£3,750
£125,001 – £250,000£0£2,500£6,250
£250,001 – £300,000£0£2,500£4,000
£300,001 – £425,000£6,250£6,250£10,000
Total SDLT£6,250£11,250£24,000

Before vs After: FTB at £425,000

Period FTB SDLT at £425k FTB Nil-Rate Band FTB Price Cap
Sep 2022 – Mar 2025£0£425,000£625,000
From Apr 2025£6,250£300,000£500,000

First-time buyers at £425,000 face a £6,250 increase in upfront costs compared to the temporary rates. This is the single biggest threshold change affecting FTBs.

Impact on £425k Buyers in 2026

The £6,250 SDLT bill at £425,000 has real consequences. For a first-time buyer saving a 10% deposit (£42,500), adding £6,250 in SDLT means £48,750 in total upfront cash — before solicitor fees, surveys, and removal costs. This is approximately 12 months of additional saving at £500/month.

Some FTBs are now considering properties at £300,000 or below to stay within the zero-SDLT threshold. Others are negotiating lower purchase prices with sellers who understand the changed tax landscape.

The Lifetime ISA (£450,000 property price cap) still covers a £425,000 purchase, providing up to £1,000/year in government bonus towards the deposit — but not towards SDLT.

Plan Your £425k Purchase

SDLT calculations verified against HMRC rates, March 2026. This page is for guidance only. Confirm your eligibility for FTB relief with a solicitor.

Common Mistakes First-Time Buyers Make at £425,000

  1. Assuming FTB relief means zero stamp duty. At £425,000, first-time buyers pay £6,250 in SDLT. The £300,000 nil-rate threshold only covers the first portion — the remaining £125,000 is taxed at 5%. Budget accordingly.
  2. Not realising joint buyers must both be first-time buyers. If you are buying with a partner who already owns property, neither of you qualifies for FTB relief. The entire purchase is taxed at standard rates, costing £8,750 instead of £6,250.
  3. Stretching beyond £500,000 and losing relief entirely. FTB relief only applies to properties up to £500,000. If your purchase price is even £1 above this threshold, you lose the relief completely and pay standard SDLT of £12,500.
  4. Ignoring Help to Buy ISA and Lifetime ISA bonus limits. A Lifetime ISA provides a 25% bonus on savings up to £4,000 per year, but the property must cost £450,000 or less. At £425,000 you qualify, but be aware if negotiations push the price higher.
  5. Forgetting to declare FTB status to your solicitor. Your conveyancer must tick the correct box on the SDLT return. If they file it as a standard purchase by mistake, you will be overcharged £2,500 and need to apply for a refund.

5 Steps for First-Time Buyers Purchasing at £425,000

  1. Save your deposit and claim available bonuses. A 10% deposit on £425,000 is £42,500. Maximise your Lifetime ISA bonus (up to £1,000/year) and check whether your employer offers a salary sacrifice savings scheme.
  2. Get a mortgage agreement in principle. Lenders typically offer 4–4.5 times your household income. For £382,500 borrowing (90% LTV), you generally need a combined income of around £85,000–£95,000.
  3. Find your property and make an offer. Let the agent know you are a first-time buyer — sellers often prefer FTBs because there is no chain. This can give you negotiating leverage on price.
  4. Instruct a solicitor and confirm your FTB relief. Ensure your conveyancer is aware of your first-time buyer status from day one so they apply the correct SDLT rates on the return. Provide ID and proof of no prior property ownership.
  5. Exchange, complete, and file your SDLT return. On completion, your solicitor transfers funds and files the SDLT return within 14 days. Your £6,250 SDLT payment is included in the completion statement.

First-Time Buyer vs Standard Buyer: Total Cost Comparison at £425,000

See how FTB relief reduces the total upfront costs compared with a standard residential buyer at the same price.

Cost First-Time Buyer Standard Buyer FTB Saving
SDLT£6,250£8,750£2,500
Deposit (10%)£42,500£42,500
Legal fees£1,500£1,500
Survey£600£600
Moving costs£900£900
Total Upfront Cost£51,750£54,250£2,500

Did You Know?

Did You Know? The average first-time buyer in England is now 34 years old and puts down a deposit of around £53,000. At £425,000, you are buying above the national FTB average of £298,000 — but well within the £500,000 FTB relief cap.
Did You Know? Before April 2025, first-time buyers paid £0 SDLT on properties up to £425,000 thanks to the temporary £425,000 nil-rate band. The threshold has now reverted to £300,000, meaning FTBs at this price point pay £6,250 instead of nothing.
Did You Know? If you buy a shared-ownership property at £425,000 and elect to pay SDLT on the initial share only, you may pay significantly less upfront. For example, a 40% share (£170,000) falls entirely within the FTB nil-rate band — meaning £0 SDLT.

Pro Tips for First-Time Buyers at £425,000

Potential Savings for First-Time Buyers at £425,000

FTB Relief Saving

First-time buyer relief saves you £2,500 compared to standard SDLT rates at £425,000. You pay £6,250 instead of £8,750 — enough to cover your solicitor's fees.

Lifetime ISA Bonus

Four years of maximum LISA contributions gives you £4,000 in government bonuses. Combined with your FTB SDLT saving, that is £6,500 back in your pocket on a £425,000 purchase.

Negotiate £25,000 Off the Price

Reducing the price from £450,000 to £425,000 saves £25,000 on the purchase plus £1,250 in SDLT. The combined saving of £26,250 is equivalent to over a year of mortgage payments.

Stamp Duty FAQs

Everything you need to know about SDLT rates, deadlines and reliefs for 2025/26.

For standard purchases in England and NI from 1 April 2025: 0% up to £125,000; 2% on £125,001–£250,000; 5% on £250,001–£925,000; 10% on £925,001–£1,500,000; 12% above £1,500,000. Additional property buyers pay a 3% surcharge on every band. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax
SDLT must be filed and paid within 14 days of completion. Your solicitor will usually handle this on your behalf. Failure to file on time results in automatic penalties starting at £100. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax
Yes. First time buyers in England and NI pay 0% on the first £300,000 and 5% on £300,001–£500,000. Above £500,000, standard rates apply and no relief is available. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax/first-time-buyers
An additional property is any residential property you buy when you already own another residential property anywhere in the world. A 3% surcharge applies on every band. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax/higher-rates
Yes — if you paid the higher rates surcharge because you hadn’t yet sold your previous main residence, you can apply to HMRC for a refund, provided you sell your previous main home within 36 months of purchasing the new one. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax/higher-rates
No. Scotland replaced SDLT with Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) in 2015. The rates and bands differ from those in England and NI. Source: revenue.scot/land-buildings-transaction-tax
Yes, SDLT applies to new build purchases in the same way as any other residential property. The same rates and thresholds apply. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax
Non-UK residents buying residential property in England and NI pay a 2% surcharge on top of standard SDLT rates. This applies since 1 April 2021. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax/nonresidentssdlt
No. Wales has its own Land Transaction Tax (LTT) with a zero-rate band up to £225,000. Source: gov.wales/land-transaction-tax-guide
Missing the 14-day SDLT filing deadline triggers automatic penalties from HMRC: £100 for filing up to 3 months late; £200 for 3–12 months late; a tax-geared penalty of up to 100% for over 12 months. Source: gov.uk/stamp-duty-land-tax/penalties