Stamp Duty on a £150,000 Property: 2025–26 Figures for Every Buyer Type
In short
Stamp duty on a £150,000 property in England is £500 for a standard buyer, £0 for an eligible first-time buyer and £8,000 for a buy-to-let or second home. Scotland LBTT is £100 and Wales LTT is £0. A first-time buyer saves £500 against the standard SDLT bill at this price, before legal, mortgage or survey costs.
A £150,000 purchase sits just above the standard SDLT nil-rate band in England, which makes it a useful low-price worked example: standard buyers have a small tax bill, first-time buyers pay nothing, and Wales remains at £0 under the standard LTT bands.
Stamp duty at a glance
First-time buyers pay £0 SDLT while standard buyers pay a modest £500.
| Buyer Type | SDLT (England) | LBTT (Scotland) | LTT (Wales) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard buyer | £500 | £100 | £0 |
| First-time buyer | £0 | Standard LBTT shown: £100 | Standard LTT shown: £0 |
| Additional dwelling | £8,000 (standard + 5%) | Standard LBTT shown: £100 | Standard LTT shown: £0 |
| Effective rate (standard) | 0.33% | 0.07% | 0.00% |
How Stamp Duty Is Calculated on £150,000
For England and Northern Ireland, the standard SDLT bill on £150,000 is £500 because SDLT is calculated in slices, not by applying one rate to the whole price. The first £125,000 is taxed at 0%, the next slice to £250,000 at 2%, and the amount above £250,000 at 5% until the £925,000 threshold. The exact standard SDLT effective rate at this price is 0.33%.
| Band | Taxable Amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| £0–£125,000 | £125,000 | 0% | £0 |
| £125,001–£250,000 | £25,000 | 2% | £500 |
| Total SDLT | £500 |
First-Time Buyer Stamp Duty on £150,000
An eligible first-time buyer pays £0 SDLT on a £150,000 purchase because the price is within the 0% first-time buyer band. The saving versus a standard buyer is £500. This is the key distinction for buyers close to the lower-to-mid market: the standard SDLT calculation still applies to non-FTB buyers, but the eligible FTB calculation removes it.
First-time buyer saving at this price: £500.
Stamp Duty on £150,000 Buy-to-Let or Second Home
For an additional dwelling in England, this page calculates SDLT as standard SDLT plus a 5% surcharge on the full purchase price. On £150,000, the surcharge is £7,500, so the total additional-dwelling SDLT is £8,000. The effective England rate for this scenario is 5.33%.
How Does £150,000 Compare Across England, Scotland and Wales?
The same £150,000 purchase produces different standard tax bills across the UK because SDLT, LBTT and LTT use different band thresholds. At this price, England standard SDLT is £500, Scotland LBTT is £100, and Wales LTT is £0.
| Jurisdiction | Tax | Standard Tax Due | Effective Rate | Difference vs England |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| England & Northern Ireland | SDLT | £500 | 0.33% | Baseline |
| Scotland | LBTT | £100 | 0.07% | £400 less than England |
| Wales | LTT | £0 | 0.00% | £500 less than England |
Properties Near This Price
Buyers comparing properties around £150,000 should check the neighbouring price points because one extra bid can move part of the price into a higher marginal band. The links below pre-fill the calculator for nearby values and show the standard England SDLT figure.
Adjust for your exact situation — add a different price, switch to Scotland or Wales, or check buy-to-let costs.
Open Full Calculator →Frequently Asked Questions
Stamp duty on a £150,000 house in England is £500 for a standard buyer. An eligible first-time buyer pays £0, and a buy-to-let or second home buyer pays £8,000 using the additional-dwelling calculation in this page.
Eligible first-time buyers pay £0 on a £150,000 purchase and save £500 compared with standard SDLT.
Using the additional-dwelling calculation in this page, stamp duty on a £150,000 second home in England is £8,000. That is the standard SDLT of £500 plus a 5% surcharge on the full purchase price, equal to £7,500.
No. On a £150,000 property, standard LBTT in Scotland is £100 and standard LTT in Wales is £0, compared with standard SDLT of £500 in England and Northern Ireland.
For England and Northern Ireland, SDLT is normally filed and paid within 14 days of the effective transaction date, usually completion. In practice, the buyer’s solicitor or conveyancer usually files the return and pays the tax from completion funds.