Customize Consent Preferences

We use cookies to help you navigate efficiently and perform certain functions. You will find detailed information about all cookies under each consent category below.

The cookies that are categorized as "Necessary" are stored on your browser as they are essential for enabling the basic functionalities of the site. ... 

Always Active

Necessary cookies are required to enable the basic features of this site, such as providing secure log-in or adjusting your consent preferences. These cookies do not store any personally identifiable data.

Functional cookies help perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collecting feedback, and other third-party features.

Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics such as the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.

Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.

Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with customized advertisements based on the pages you visited previously and to analyze the effectiveness of the ad campaigns.

21.2 C
Cheshire
Sunday, April 20, 2025

NAPB: A stamp duty cut for pensioners could help boost the property market

PLANS to offer tax breaks to pensioners looking to downsize their homes, have been welcomed by a leading property group.

The National Association of Property Buyers (NAPB) said proposals could help to free up the market at a time where supply is fast becoming an issue.

Jonathan Rolande, from the NAPB, said: “We’d welcome a stamp duty cut for pensioners selling their own home to downsize. It would allow them to move without the penalty of high SDLT and would certainly encourage more to do so. Currently a pensioner selling a family home at £700,000 to buy at £500,000 would face a £15,000 stamp duty bill and with other costs such as estate agent and solicitors a move downward is going to cost them nearly £30,000 – a figure many simply cannot bring themselves to pay when leaving a much loved family home. Government receipts from stamp duty have more than doubled in the last ten years so there is certainly capacity to offer targeted reductions to help free up stock.”

Mr Rolande’s comments come days after the plans for a stamp duty cut were first revealed. New proposals could also see buy-to-let landlords given incentives, such as lower capital gains tax, to sell their second homes to first-time buyers.

However Mr Rolande said this measure could backfire: “We strongly disagree with any plan to reduce taxes for landlords who sell to first time buyers,” he added.

“The last thing we need right now is fewer properties to let, penalising those not in a position to buy their home. If tax breaks for wealthy landlords are on the table, why not use them to incentivise those who let their property on longer term agreements, giving more security to hard pressed tenants? We’re very glad that the government is looking at measures to repair parts of the broken property market but I am fearful that ill-considered action to solve one problem here will create another issue elsewhere.”

Rising numbers of young people are struggling to get their foot on the property ladder and prices are still rising. Yet, at the same time, almost four in ten properties are officially ‘under-occupied’, meaning they have too many bedrooms for those living there, and could be more effectively used by families with children.

The new ideas follow Housing Secretary Michael Gove’s decision to ditch most of the Government’s changes to the planning system in England. These would have forced councils to ensure a certain number of homes were built but sparked a backlash in the Tory shires. Last November a minister said he wanted to encourage elderly people ‘rattling around’ in houses too big for them to downsize.

No stamp duty is paid on the first £125,000 of a house’s value, 2 per cent on the proportion up to £250,000, 5 per cent on the amount up to £925,000, with higher rates thereafter.

The average price of a home in Britain is £367,501, a record high for the fourth month in a row as demand soars after the pandemic, said website Rightmove.

According to their data, the number of buyers contacting estate agents is 14% down on the stamp-duty holiday-fuelled market of this time last year, but is still up by 31% compared with the more ‘normal’ pre-pandemic market of 2019. The number of properties available to buy is 55% down on the levels seen in 2019, meaning that supply and demand look likely to remain out of kilter for at least the rest of the year. The number of sales agreed is up by 12% in the year to date compared to 2019 even with restricted choice, though is down 17% compared with the ‘exceptional’ market of the same period last year.

“The market is yet to fully reflect the various pressures that will be put upon it in the next few months – higher interest rates, cost of living increases and more rigorous affordability checks by lenders will all have an effect,” Mr Rolande said.

“However, there is still very solid demand from buyers and of course the now long-term issue around shortage of supply. Coupled with good employment numbers and the aspiration of many to own their own home, it is possible that the market will slow without the freefall in prices predicted by many.

“Some targeted government intervention to guide the market to where it should be is crucial to unlocking supply and helping those who need it most.”

spot_imgspot_img

Latest

Surespan Faces £120,000 Project Cost Surge After US Aluminium Tariffs

The Trump administration’s recent aluminium tariff has added major...

Iceland Foods opens £100 million warehouse creating hundreds of jobs

Iceland Foods has officially opened its brand new 500,000...

Woman sentenced for faking paternity tests

A woman has been sentenced after deceiving her ex-partner...

Four Female entrepreneurs lead Womanifest Festival 2025 in Cheshire

A powerhouse team of four female entrepreneurs are at...
spot_imgspot_img

Newsletter

Don't miss

Iceland Foods opens £100 million warehouse creating hundreds of jobs

Iceland Foods has officially opened its brand new 500,000...

Farndon business community to hold summer social

A Cheshire business community is teaming up to put...

Sunlight-Based Cancer Defence Discovered by Oxford Team

A research team led by Dr Daniel Chen, from...

Four Female entrepreneurs lead Womanifest Festival 2025 in Cheshire

A powerhouse team of four female entrepreneurs are at...

More News

Loanboox Emerges as Digital Trailblazer in Commercial Property Financing

The shift towards digital solutions in commercial property financing is gaining serious traction, with Loanboox leading the charge as a trusted digital partner for...

A New Era in Conveyancing: Kaur Sutherland Pioneers Balanced Practice

In today’s high-pressure legal environment, conveyancing firms are being forced to rethink how they manage rising client demands, maintain business health, and protect staff...

Top Ways Homeowners Can Boost Property Value

For millions of homeowners and real estate investors, as buyer expectations and real estate market conditions are in a state of flux, the two...