Second-Home Costs on a £150,000 Purchase in England / Northern Ireland (2026/27)
This page estimates costs on a £150,000 purchase in England / Northern Ireland for a additional property buyer. The current estimate is £10,699 all-in with £8,000 in property tax, and the largest contribution currently comes from Additional property surcharge.
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.
Calculator inputs
Quick prices ▼
Band-by-band tax breakdown ▼
| Band | Taxable slice | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to £125,000 | £125,000 | 0.0% | £0 |
| £125,001 to £250,000 | £25,000 | 2.0% | £500 |
| Additional property surcharge | £150,000 | 5.0% | £7,500 |
| Total | £300,000 | — | £8,000 |
Estimates only. Confirm with your conveyancer and official calculators. Sources.
Second-home costs on £150,000
Models additional-property treatment and full all-in costs including editable fee assumptions.
Share URL: /results?price=150000...
At a glance
- Property tax total: £8,000
- Fees total: £2,699
- All-in total: £10,699
- Effective tax rate: 5.33%
- Marginal tax rate: 5.0%
- Most tax comes from Additional property surcharge at 5.0% (£7,500).
Assumptions used
- Tax year: 2026/27
- Nation basis: England / Northern Ireland
- Buyer scenario: Additional Property Buyer
- Legal fees: £1,200
- Survey: £500
- Mortgage fee: £999
These are typical estimates. Your actual costs may differ.
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.
- Stamp duty / property tax: £8,000 under the selected nation and buyer type.
- Conveyancing fees: currently £1,200 (editable in the calculator).
- Survey and mortgage costs: £500 survey + £999 lender fee assumptions.
- Total upfront cash needed before completion: £10,699 all-in estimate for this scenario.
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 |
|---|---|---|---|
| £125,000 | £-1,750 | £-1,750 | View page |
| £175,000 | +£1,750 | +£1,750 | View page |
| £100,000 | £-3,000 | £-3,000 | View page |
| £200,000 | +£3,500 | +£3,500 | View page |
- Additional property surcharge contributes £7,500 at 5.0% in this scenario.
- £125,001 to £250,000 contributes £500 at 2.0% in this scenario.
- Additional-property treatment can increase totals sharply at the same price, so stress-test offers before committing.
How to use this page well
This page is designed for additional-property surcharge stress-testing. Additional-property treatment can change the total sharply, so this page is useful for buy-to-let and second-home budgeting before offers are submitted.
Use the nearby-price comparison table and test fee assumptions with a contingency buffer. That gives a more realistic completion-cash range than a single point estimate.
At this price band, fees and contingencies can be a surprisingly large proportion of total cash needed.
Practical checks before you offer
- Run the same price with a different buyer type before finalising your offer strategy.
- Keep fee assumptions realistic and update them as quotes arrive rather than waiting until exchange.
- Use the city and county pages for local-intent comparisons, but verify final figures with your conveyancer before completion.
Understanding the costs on a £150,000 purchase
The headline stamp duty figure is only part of what you need to have available at completion. On a £150,000 property, the all-in total is £10,699 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 £150,000 property, the effective tax rate is 5.33%, 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 5.33% means that across the whole £150,000 purchase price, 5.33% 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
- Confirm you have the all-in completion sum (£10,699) available as cleared cash — not just the deposit your mortgage lender requires.
- Check whether you qualify as a first-time buyer under HMRC's definition; if you have ever owned a residential property anywhere in the world, FTB relief does not apply.
- If you own other property, confirm whether the 5% additional-property surcharge applies (England and Northern Ireland from October 2024). The surcharge is on the full purchase price and can be refunded within 12 months if your previous main residence is sold.
- Get your conveyancing quote in writing before exchange — fees can vary by £500–£1,000 depending on the firm and any leasehold complexity.
- Ask your mortgage broker whether there is a free valuation or cashback that offsets the arrangement fee, as this changes the net mortgage cost used in the all-in total.
FAQ
What does the total cost include at £150,000?
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.