Monday 18 May 2015

Devolved Welsh stamp duty could hit prime homes

Estate agents fear prime property purchases could be targeted by the first Welsh tax in over 800 years.

Concerns have been raised that the Welsh government may adopt a more progressive model of property taxation, along the lines of Scotland’s new tax, when powers are devolved to Cardiff in 2018.
 
A consultation on land transaction tax, which will replace stamp duty in Wales, concluded this week, but rates and bands will not be decided until well after Welsh assembly elections next year.

Stamp duty collected in Wales totalled only £145m in 2013-14, although the Office for Budget Responsibility recently forecast that this would rise to £231m by 2018-19 — the year when control of the tax will be devolved.


Although average house prices in Wales — at £170,000, according to the latest Office of National Statistics figures — are much lower than the UK average of £267,000,  there has been no proposal to lower the threshold at which tax becomes payable. This lower limit currently stands at £125,000.


Additional powers for Cardiff were proposed by the Conservative-led government earlier this year. Combined with the devolution of stamp duty, landfill tax and business rates, the Welsh assembly would be responsible for raising roughly one-fifth of its budget.


Plaid Cymru, the nationalist opposition party, wants Wales to have the same taxation powers as Scotland, which is set to gain control of its income tax and bands following last year’s independence referendum.

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