SDLT receipts and transactions down

NAEA Propertymark Protected firm LCP has analysed HMRC’s Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) statistics for 2018 and found that it brings mixed fortunes, with receipts from the three per cent additional duty (HRAD) suffering the largest drop.

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To make a fair comparison with 2017, the analysis adds back transactions and receipts from the Welsh Revenue Authority (as Wales has been omitted from the HMRC SDLT report since Q2 2018). It also takes into account First Time Buyers’ Relief introduced in November 2017.

  • Tax receipts for 2018 in England, Wales and Northern Ireland are down 8.5 per cent on 2017 and amount to £8.669bn, a loss of revenue of £802m.
  • Transactions in England, Wales and Northern Ireland fell 2.6 per cent from 2017 and now stand at 1,083,970.
  • Receipts from the Higher Rate for Additional Dwellings (HRAD), the additional 3 per cent SDLT on buy-to-lets and second homes, have fallen 14.2 per cent from 2017, amounting to a £285m drop.
  • The 3 per cent HRAD receipts now represent 18.8 per cent of total tax take, compared with 21.1 per cent in 2017.
  • This is a result of a fall in HRAD transactions of 4.6 per cent since 2017.
  • 217,800 buyers have claimed First Time Buyers’ Relief, amounting to relief of £517m although this appears to be plateauing.

HMRC’s report for 2018 will not come as a surprise to most as there has been very little positive news of late. The successive tax hikes introduced on residential property and the lack of a clear Brexit scenario looms heavily over the UK.

Transactions have fallen by 2.6 per cent in 2018 and now stand at just over 1 million. This compares with HM Land Registry data for 2018, which reports a 4 per cent fall. On a more granular level, HRAD transactions, i.e. those which include the 3 per cent additional duty, have been hardest hit, with a fall of 4.6 per cent.

The 2.6 per cent fall in transactions reported in HMRC’s 2018 SDLT report reinforces the surfeit of statistics, showing buyers now holding back. The febrile political climate around the UK’s departure from the EU and stagnating prices, have brought ever growing uncertainty to the residential market, following several years of increased taxation.

Receipts have followed suit with transactions, which have fallen 8.5 per cent overall. The receipts from the three per cent additional duty (HRAD) have suffered the largest drop, falling 14.2 per cent. This has been the result of dwindling numbers of second home and rental purchases. The total revenue for HMRC amounted to £8.669bn, a fall of almost £1bn on 2017. Even if the amount of tax claimed under First Time Buyers’ Relief, which the Exchequer would see as a ‘tax giveaway’ was added back, the total take would still be down 3.6 per cent.
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Naomi Heaton CEO | LCP

First Time Buyers’ Relief was an initiative introduced to help many struggling to get on the housing ladder and amounted to £517m in 2018. This represents a saving for the average purchaser of £2,374 at a crucial time when they are saving for their first deposit. However, take up appears to be plateauing, with 60,700 transactions claiming FTBR in Q4 2018, compared with 59,000 in Q3; a rise of just 2.9 per cent.

With the housing market in such a parlous state, it can only be hoped that Chancellor Philip Hammond will not implement an additional levy of 1 per cent on non-residential purchasers, proposed in the last Budget. This would seem to be particularly imprudent in light of the UK’s need to build on global investment as it exits the EU.

Foreign investors represent a significant proportion of buyers, particularly in new build developments. The December LCPAca Residential Index recorded a 20.8% premium in Greater London for new build versus older stock. With developers currently struggling and scaling back projects, this new tax would not be welcome as the higher end stock enables developers to build out much needed affordable housing. It is also unlikely to have a material impact on tax revenues, given the recent trend of falling receipts, alongside steadily rising tax rates.