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Monday 03 November 2025 10:42 am

Abolish regressive, outdated stamp duty

By: Alex Michelin

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Average house prices in June flatlined in the UK
“Rebalancing risk is central to our strategy,” the FCA said.

Stamp duty abolition isn’t just desirable it’s an economic necessity, says Alex Michelin

Ask any first-time buyer, young family or downsizing pensioner what’s stopping them from moving  home and you’ll hear the same answer: Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT). This once marginal transaction cost has evolved into a structural impediment to the UK housing market, throttling mobility, discouraging movement and stifling productivity and economic growth. 

Let’s start with the numbers. SDLT receipts reached £11.6bn in 2022-23, nearly double what they  were a decade ago. This has come not from a booming market, but from bracket creep; as house prices  rise, more buyers are pushed into higher tax bands. In London, where the average house price is £564,000, even modest family homes incur hefty SDLT charges. A family upgrading to a £1.2m home, a typical four-bedroom house in Zones 2-4, faces a tax bill of £61,250 before a single box is  packed. 

This cost has a chilling effect. In 2023, just 1.01m transactions took place, down from 1.2-1.3  million pre-pandemic, and the lowest since 2012. A 2017 LSE report concluded that SDLT is a major  deterrent to transactions. In 2015, following the Conservative government’s SDLT overhaul,  transaction volumes fell notably: total sales in England and Wales dropped 11 per cent, while prime central London declined 17 per cent compared to 2014. People are trapped because they cannot justify the SDLT cost. 

Young buyers are hit hardest. Despite schemes like Help to Buy, many first-time buyers face the  double challenge of high deposits and SDLT. Those who scrape together a deposit find themselves  unable to afford the tax hit required to climb the ladder. Successive governments pledge to support “generation rent” yet allow SDLT policy to trap them. 

It’s not just the young who suffer. Older homeowners, often asset-rich but income-poor, want to  downsize and free up family homes but find themselves penalised for doing so. 

Stamp duty put lives on hold

The broader economic impact is equally troubling. The housing market is a critical enabler of labour mobility. When people can move easily, they take new jobs, start families, grow businesses. SDLT disincentivises this. A 2017 LSE study found that for every one per cent increase in SDLT, there’s a 17-20 per cent decrease in the probability of a household moving. We’ve designed a tax that penalises dynamism. 

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Canada has seen the average price of its property drop 36 per cent since 2018.

SDLT also distorts where people live. It incentivises staying in unsuitable homes, too small for growing families or too large for ageing singles, simply to avoid the tax. This creates gross  misallocation of housing stock in a country already suffering chronic shortage. 

Whilst revenue from property taxes is important for our economy, SDLT is an inefficient way of raising it. It punishes transactions rather than ownership. It penalises the behaviour we should encourage: moving, downsizing and releasing housing stock. 

Simply altering rates won’t fix this. In its current form, SDLT is regressive and outdated. SDLT should be abolished entirely. Revenue should instead be replaced by a reformed and fairer Council Tax – introduced in 1993, based on 1991 property prices and not reassessed since – to reflect current values.  

This would be more progressive, placing the burden on those with the broadest shoulders whilst maintaining revenue and removing current market friction. 

Ultimately, a dynamic housing market fuels consumption, employment, construction and economic growth. Most importantly, it’s about lives on hold: the young family with no second bedroom, the retiree facing a £90,000 tax penalty to downsize, the worker turning down a job because moving house is too expensive. 

Stamp Duty works against all of them. Abolition isn’t just desirable; it’s an economic and social necessity.

Alex Michelin is founder and CEO of Valouran 

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Capital gains tax is not currently charged on primary residences. (Credit Beauchamp Estates)

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