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Stamp Duty another leading agent wants it to be a sellers tax

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Mon 06 Mar 2017

Stamp Duty another leading agent wants it to be a sellers tax

  •  another leading agent wants it to be a seller's tax


BREAKING NEWS
06 March 2017
Graham Norwood
By Graham Norwood
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Stamp Duty: another leading agent wants it to be a seller's tax

Jeremy Leaf, the London estate agent and former RICS residential chairman, is the latest industry figure to call for the government to consider levying stamp duty on sellers rather than buyers. 

Help for downsizers and first-time buyers by way of stamp duty concessions to stimulate more transactions.

“If sellers, rather than purchasers, pay stamp duty, activity will increase especially if house building picks up too - bearing in mind the increasingly high proportion of first-time buyers who pay [SDLT] now” says Leaf. 

He says high stamp duty levied on buyers is stopping transactions across the housing market, not just at the top end but also amongst first time buyers purchasing at the lower end of the market. Leaf claims around 75 per cent of FTBs now pay stamp duty, whereas back in 2008 the proportion was nearer 50 per cent.

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Last week another London agent - Trevor Abrahmsohn, head of Glentree International - wrote an open letter to Chancellor Phillip Hammond saying he should consider at least splitting stamp duty payment between vendor and purchaser. “At least the purchaser will feel that under this arrangement, since the stamp duty tax has been effectively halved, this could be the very stimulus that the market requires” Abrahmsohn wrote.

In addition, the Yorkshire Building Society has also called for SDLT to be a sellers’ tax instead of a buyers’ tax. The mutual says first-time buyers could save an average of £3,625 if stamp duty was paid by the seller, while those moving up the ladder could save an average of £4,154.

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