So, quite an easy start to this
weeks column as the Chancellors 'Autumn
Statement' has written most of my column for me! If you haven't seen the news, for Second
Properties, or Buy to Let purchases, stamp duty rates will be 3% higher. This means that we have the following:
• Value of property £40,000 to
£125,000 – additional stamp duty surcharge of 3%
• Up to £250,000 – SDLT increased to 5%
• Up to £925,000 – SDLT increased to 8%
• Up to £1.5m – SDLT increased to 13%
• Over £1.5m – SDLT increased to 15%
• Up to £250,000 – SDLT increased to 5%
• Up to £925,000 – SDLT increased to 8%
• Up to £1.5m – SDLT increased to 13%
• Over £1.5m – SDLT increased to 15%
Therefore, for a property valued
at £175k, stamp duty is currently £1,000 and this will now increase to
£6,250. Quite a hike! For a property valued at £300k, the
additional increase amounts to an eye watering £9k!
The Chancellor says this is in order
to help first time buyers. Some would
say that landlords will still buy properties whilst first time buyers struggle
to get on to the ladder, but rentals charges may be increased to cover the
additional cost. And whilst this does
not come in to force until April 16, some estate agents are predicting a
short-term surge in property purchases.
With the recent stamp duty changes
and increases in taxation on profits being introduced over the next few years,
the Buy to Let sector has taken quite a beating over the last couple of
budgets. Yet with interest rates so low
and demand for rented properties increasing, and no clearly defined solution to
help first time buyers, I can't see these changes killing off the buy to let
sector just yet!
What it does do is ‘stutter’
interest from those who might have been looking to invest in property compared
to plunging savings rates and volatile stocks.
If the Chancellor's long term vision is to kill offer the buy to let
sector entirely, then those who may have been looking at income from Properties
as a viable alternative to a pension arrangement may well be slightly more wary
given these latest developments.
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