£175,000 property as Mover: SDLT calculation 2026/27
Buying a £175,000 property in England or Northern Ireland as a mover (replacement of main home) in the 2026/27 tax year? Stamp Duty Land Tax comes to £1,000, an effective rate of 0.57% across the whole purchase price. Standard SDLT bands apply: 0% to £125k, 2% to £250k, 5% to £925k, 10% to £1.5m, 12% above. Figures below are computed live from the same engine that powers the main SDLT calculator and reproduce against HMRC's official tool.
Mortgage context: at a 10% deposit (£17,500), the loan needed is £157,500. At a standard 4.5x loan-to-income multiplier the household would need £35,000 of gross annual income to qualify. See the mortgage affordability calculator for stress-tested monthly payments.
Headline figure
Band breakdown
SDLT is charged in slices: each portion of the purchase price falls into one band and is taxed at that band's rate. The figures below match the gov.uk SDLT bands for the standard bands .
| Band | Rate | Amount in band | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| £0 - £125,000 | 0.0% | £125,000 | £0 |
| £125,000 - £250,000 | 2.0% | £50,000 | £1,000 |
| Total SDLT | £175,000 | £1,000 |
Same £175,000 price across all buyer types
Buyer status changes the SDLT bill dramatically at the same purchase price. The table below shows every scenario the SDLT engine handles for £175,000.
Same buyer type at other price points
How SDLT scales for a mover as the purchase price moves up and down the ladder.
Property tax in Scotland and Wales at £175,000
SDLT applies in England and Northern Ireland only. Scotland charges LBTT (different bands plus an 8% Additional Dwelling Supplement on the whole price); Wales charges LTT (no first-time-buyer relief). The same £175,000 purchase at the closest equivalent buyer status:
| Region / tax | Tax due | Effective rate | Calculator |
|---|---|---|---|
| England / NI - SDLT (this page) | £1,000 | 0.57% | SDLT |
| Scotland - LBTT | £600 | 0.34% | LBTT £175,000 |
| Wales - LTT | £0 | 0.00% | LTT hub |
Mortgage affordability at £175,000
Buying a £175,000 property typically means a 10% deposit (£17,500) plus the £1,000 of SDLT. The loan needed is £157,500. Lender loan-to-income multipliers determine the income required:
| Multiplier | Income needed | Common availability |
|---|---|---|
| 4.0x (conservative) | £39,375 | Most lenders' default for joint applicants |
| 4.5x (standard) | £35,000 | FPC portfolio-cap threshold; typical sole strong-income offer |
| 5.0x (stretch) | £31,500 | Specialist lenders, strong affordability evidence |
Run the full affordability stress test (rate + 3pp, monthly payments, regional transaction tax) on the mortgage affordability calculator.
Next steps
- Stamp Duty calculator hub - run any custom price + buyer combination.
- Mortgage affordability calculator - income, deposit, and monthly-payment context.
- Scotland LBTT calculator - different bands plus 8% ADS on additional dwellings.
- Wales LTT calculator - different bands again; no FTB relief.
- All buyer types at £175,000 - side-by-side four-scenario page.
Frequently asked questions
- How much SDLT do I pay on a £175,000 property as a mover?
- £1,000 of Stamp Duty Land Tax on a £175,000 purchase in England or Northern Ireland for the 2026/27 tax year, treated as a mover (replacement of main home). That works out to an effective rate of 0.57% across the whole purchase price. Standard SDLT bands apply: 0% to £125k, 2% to £250k, 5% to £925k, 10% to £1.5m, 12% above.
- Would I save SDLT if I qualified as a first-time buyer?
- Yes - a first-time buyer at £175,000 pays £0, a saving of £1,000 versus the standard mover rate of £1,000. To qualify, every buyer on the title must have never owned a residential property anywhere in the world.
- What if I haven't sold my previous main home yet?
- If you complete on the new home before selling the previous one, HMRC treats the purchase as an additional property and charges the +5% surcharge - £9,750 at this price instead of £1,000. You can claim the surcharge back if you sell the previous main home within 36 months of completion on the new one. Most movers either bridge the gap with a short-term loan or accept the surcharge upfront and reclaim it after sale.
- When is SDLT due?
- SDLT must be paid within 14 days of completion. Your conveyancing solicitor typically files the SDLT return and pays HMRC on your behalf at completion. Build the £1,000 into your completion-day cash budget along with the deposit balance and legal fees.