The ยฃ2m+ homes that will be hit by Rachel Reeves’s new ‘mansion tax’ | Politics | News


Rachel Reeves’s new hammer blow tax on higher value homes will heavily impact London and the South East, but a new map reveals that every part of the country could be affected. Owners of properties valued at more than ยฃ2 million are set to be hit with a surcharge of at least ยฃ2,5000 from 2028 in what has been dubbed the โ€œmansion taxโ€.

The High Value council tax Surcharge was announced in Ms Reevesโ€™s Budget and will be charged on top of the existing council tax. However, unlike the council tax, the surcharge will go directly to the central Government.

The Treasury said a body called the Valuation Office will decide which properties are worth ยฃ2 million and therefore liable for the new charge. The number and location of homes that will be impacted are therefore unknown at this stage; however, an exclusive analysis of Land Registry data by the Reach Data Unit has revealed every home in England and Wales that has sold for over ยฃ2 million in the last five years.

Scroll down for our interactive map to see if your home could be affected…

A total of over 26,500 homes cost their new owners on or above the mansion tax threshold since the start of 2020. More than two thirds of those (67%) have been in London.

Westminster has seen a total of 3,832 homes sold for ยฃ2 million or more in the last five years. That works out as 14% of the total, or one in every seven across the country. Kensington and Chelsea has had the next highest number with 3,525. Thatโ€™s around one in every eight (13%) of the total in England and Wales.

Camden has the next highest number with 1,482 (6%), followed by Wandsworth with 1,412 (5%), Hammersmith and Fulham with 1,212 (5%), and Richmond upon Thames with 1,068 (4%).

Elmbridge in Surrey has the highest number outside of the capital with 939 homes.

Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole tops the list of places outside of the Home Counties with 241, while Cheshire East is top outside of the South with 183.

You can see all of the homes sold for ยฃ2 million or more in the last five years by using our interactive map.

Currently the average band D across England is ยฃ2,280. Thatโ€™s ยฃ250 more per year, the Treasury says, than a ยฃ10 million property in Mayfair, based on the band H charge in the City of Westminster.

The new surcharge will be broken up into five bands. Homes valued at between ยฃ2 million and ยฃ2.5 million will pay ยฃ2,500 a year. Those valued between ยฃ2.5 million and ยฃ3.5 million will pay ยฃ3,500 a year. Homes worth between ยฃ3.5 million and ยฃ5.0 million will pay ยฃ5,000, and those over ยฃ5 million will pay ยฃ7,500.

The surcharges will increase in line with CPI inflation each year from 2029-30 onwards.

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