Total Cost of Buying a £275,000 House in England / Northern Ireland (Tax + Fees) (2026/27)

This page estimates costs on a £275,000 purchase in England / Northern Ireland for a home mover. The current estimate is £6,449 all-in with £3,750 in property tax, and the largest contribution currently comes from £125,001 to £250,000.

What changes the result?

  • Buyer type (home mover, first-time buyer, additional property)
  • Nation selected (England/NI, Scotland, Wales)
  • Fee assumptions (legal, survey, mortgage fee)

UK Home Buying Costs Calculator (2026/27)

Estimate stamp duty plus legal, survey and mortgage fees before you make an offer.

Updated for 2026/27 Band-by-band breakdown Official sources

Calculator inputs

£
Quick prices
Typical fees (editable)

Explain these fees

Share this scenario
Copy a direct link with your current inputs.
All-in completion estimate
£6,449
Tax + buying fees
£537 / month
all-in total — / month
SDLT
£3,750
Buying fees
£2,699
All-in total
£6,449
Tax as % of price
1.36%
Band-by-band tax breakdown
Band Taxable slice Rate Tax
Up to £125,000 £125,000 0.0% £0
£125,001 to £250,000 £125,000 2.0% £2,500
£250,001 to £925,000 £25,000 5.0% £1,250
Total £275,000 £3,750

Estimates only. Confirm with your conveyancer and official calculators. Sources.

All-in completion estimate
Tax: —
Fees: —
Back to calculator

Total cost to buy a £275,000 home

This combines property tax with typical transaction fees so you can budget accurately.

Share URL: /results?price=275000...

At a glance

  • Property tax total: £3,750
  • Fees total: £2,699
  • All-in total: £6,449
  • Effective tax rate: 1.36%
  • Marginal tax rate: 5.0%
  • Most tax comes from £125,001 to £250,000 at 2.0% (£2,500).

Assumptions used

  • Tax year: 2026/27
  • Nation basis: England / Northern Ireland
  • Buyer scenario: Home Mover
  • Legal fees: £1,200
  • Survey: £500
  • Mortgage fee: £999

These are typical estimates. Your actual costs may differ.

Edit fees · See sources

Cost categories at this price

Keep tax and non-tax costs separate first, then use the combined all-in total for offer and completion planning.

What changes at this threshold?

Compare nearby price brackets with the same assumptions to see how tax and all-in totals move.

Comparison price Tax difference All-in difference Open
£250,000 £-1,250 £-1,250 View page
£300,000 +£1,250 +£1,250 View page
£225,000 £-1,750 £-1,750 View page
£325,000 +£2,500 +£2,500 View page

How to use this page well

This page is designed for full completion cash planning (tax plus fees). The current worked setup combines SDLT of £3,750 with editable fees of £2,699 for an all-in estimate of £6,449.

Use the all-in number as a planning tool, not a quote. It helps you pressure-test whether your cash position remains comfortable once legal fees, survey costs and lender fees are included.

This is a common comparison range where buyers often switch between first-time buyer, mover and second-home assumptions before bidding.

Practical checks before you offer

Understanding the costs on a £275,000 purchase

The headline stamp duty figure is only part of what you need to have available at completion. On a £275,000 property, the all-in total is £6,449 once you add legal fees, your survey and any mortgage arrangement fee. That is the figure your solicitor will need you to have cleared and ready — not the deposit figure your mortgage lender quotes, and not just the tax.

Stamp duty (or LBTT in Scotland, LTT in Wales) is charged in progressive bands — only the slice of the price in each band is taxed at that rate, not the whole purchase price. So on a £275,000 property, the effective tax rate is 1.36%, which is lower than the headline marginal rate of 5.0% that applies to the top slice of the price.

Conveyancing fees cover your solicitor's legal work from instruction through to completion — title searches, Land Registry registration and the actual SDLT/LBTT/LTT submission to HMRC or Revenue Scotland. Quotes vary quite a bit depending on the property type, leasehold complications and the solicitor's location. The default of £1,200 used here is a reasonable mid-range estimate; open the advanced fee editor and replace it with a real quote before making any final budget decisions.

What the effective rate actually means

An effective rate of 1.36% means that across the whole £275,000 purchase price, 1.36% goes to property tax. The marginal rate of 5.0% is what applies to the last pound of the price — useful to know when deciding whether to negotiate a price just below a band boundary (for example, £250,000 versus £250,001 in England, where crossing the threshold adds a significant tax step for non-first-time buyers).

Checklist before you exchange

FAQ

What does the total cost include at £275,000?

Property tax plus editable legal, survey and mortgage-fee assumptions, shown as one all-in planning estimate.

Should I include contingency?

Yes. A contingency buffer improves completion reliability, especially while quotes and timescales are still moving.

Can I compare scenarios quickly?

Yes. Switch buyer type and region in the same calculator panel to compare all-in totals.

Why does the all-in figure move more than tax alone?

At lower price points, fees and contingency can be a bigger percentage of the total than many buyers expect.

Is this final legal advice?

No. Confirm final figures with your conveyancer and official calculators.

Explore related pages