You’ve just bought the worst house on the street. No kitchen. No bathroom. No heating. The ceiling’s threatening to cave in and the estate agent used words like “project” and “full refurbishment required” as if that somehow softened the blow.
You’re bracing yourself for six months of dust, builders and eye-watering costs. Then HMRC comes knocking and says: “That’ll be full Stamp Duty, please.” Possibly with the extra 5% if it’s your second property.
And all you can think is: “Wait… what?”
Welcome to the weird and slightly infuriating world of stamp duty on uninhabitable property. Spoiler alert: it’s not as logical as it sounds.
Here’s What Most People Think
It’s pretty simple, right? If a house is uninhabitable — like, no bathroom, can’t flush a toilet, probably shouldn’t sleep there unless you want tetanus — you shouldn’t be paying stamp duty as if someone could just move in tomorrow.
That’s what a lot of buyers assume. And on the surface, it makes total sense.
But HMRC sees things a bit differently. Their take? If the property could be made liveable — even if it’s currently falling apart — it still counts as “residential.” And that means full Stamp Duty applies. Including the second-home surcharge if you already own a place.
What Can You Do?
If you’re buying a total wreck, and you think there’s a genuine case, here’s what to do:
- Get a full structural survey, not just a HomeBuyer report.
- Take lots of photos, showing the missing fixtures, the damage, and the dangerous areas.
- Speak to a property tax adviser before you file the SDLT return. Not after.
- Act quickly if you want to reclaim overpaid stamp duty, there’s a time limit for claims.
But honestly? Unless the place is genuinely unliveable — not just ugly — HMRC will likely say it’s “residential.”
Conclusion
It feels wrong, doesn’t it? You’re buying a shell of a house, pouring your life savings into making it habitable, and HMRC treats it like a move-in-ready home. That’s the frustration with stamp duty on uninhabitable property. It rarely reflects the actual state of the place.
But knowing where you stand (and what proof you’ll need) can save you a lot of hassle later. If you’re not sure? Ask someone who deals with SDLT for a living. Because once you pay it, clawing it back isn’t impossible — but it is uphill.
And let’s be honest: if you’re buying a dump, you’ve probably got enough on your plate already.