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Btl stamp duty

B

Bruce w m Cooper

New Member
I live in a house in joint names with my brother we are selling the house eventually I am moving out first do I have to pay the btl stamp duty
 
P

PostBrexitInvestor

Member
I would seek professional guidance on this but this might give you some background:-

"Keeping a former main residence

For someone who wishes to move house but decides not to sell their existing home at the same time, the higher rate of SDLT will apply. This is because even though they are replacing their main residence with a new one, at the end of the process they will own 2 properties. If the previous property is then sold within 36 months a refund of the higher SDLT rate can be applied for.

If someone decides to buy a new home as a main residence, but wants to rent out their existing home instead of selling it, they will be liable for the higher SDLT rate. This is because they will own 2 properties at the end of the process.

For a definition of a "main residence" for stamp duty purposes please refer to our stamp duty for second homes section.

https://www.stampdutycalculator.org.uk/stamp-duty-buy-to-let.htm!"
 
L

Longterminvestor

Administrator
Surely there must be some kind of redress if you hold the old house (for a short while) after you have bought a new one? Or is it simply classed as an investment as it is part owned?
 
R

realdeals

Active Member
I think these are areas where the detail needs to be clearer. If you are simply moving from house to house with a short delay in selling property 1, why should you need to jump through hoops to reclaim stamp duty on a new purchase?
 
D

diyhelp

Active Member
Hi Bruce,

Did you get any further solving your BTL stamp duty issue?
 
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