First-time buyers have paid an estimated £307m more in stamp duty since the end of the holidays in April 2025, according to new analysis. move rightThe average bill per purchase is increasing by £4,618.
The increase follows the reduction of the nil-rate threshold from £425,000 to £300,000. Before the change, 62% of homes were below the price threshold and first-time buyers were exempt from stamp duty. A year later, this figure has fallen to 41%, reducing the availability of stamp duty-free properties.
| property price | Average stamp duty bill per transaction
April 24-March 25 |
Average stamp duty bill per transaction
April 25-March 26 |
average stamp duty
increase per transaction |
| less than £300,000 | £0 | £0 | £0 |
| £300,001 – £425,000 | £0 | £3,094 | £3,094 |
| £425,001 – £500,000 | £2,171 | £8,447 | £6,276 |
| £500,001 – £625,000 | £7,074 | £18,260 | £11,186 |
Its impact is uneven across the country. among buyers London More than half of the estimated £408m paid out since the threshold was lowered south east england Contribution of about a quarter.
In contrast, areas such as North East England And East Midlands A much smaller share is made up, as more properties in those areas remain below the £300,000 threshold.
The data highlights how the current system places a greater burden on buyers in higher-priced areas, where fewer homes fall into the tax-free bracket.
| Area | stamp duty contribution |
| East Midlands | 1% |
| East of England | 10% |
| London | 53% |
| North east | 0.3% |
| north west | 2% |
| south east | 23% |
| south west | 8% |
| West Midlands | 2% |
| Yorkshire and the Humber | 1% |
Rightmove said the figures raise questions about whether the national stamp duty range reflects regional property prices, given that the current structure has remained largely unchanged since 2017.
Colleen Babcock, property commentator at Rightmove, said: “First-time buyers already face significant challenges, from higher mortgage costs to rising rents, while they save, so first-time buyers will really benefit if they can slash up-front moving costs.
“Our latest figures show how much the cost of stamp duty for first-time buyers has increased since the drop in the threshold, particularly in London and the South East, where far more homes are now above the zero-rate threshold. This reduces choice and increases the savings required before buyers can consider moving.
“The majority of first-time buyer stamp duty is now coming from a small number of high-priced areas, highlighting how the single national threshold no longer reflects local housing markets. A more regionally aligned approach to stamp duty could better support first-time buyers where affordability pressures are greatest, while also helping to encourage greater movement onto the housing ladder.”
Reflecting on the latest research from Rightmove, Propertymark CEO Nathan Emerson said the figures underline the increasing strain on first-time buyers, with high stamp duty costs “adding to already significant affordability challenges”.
He added: “The cap reduction has not only increased upfront costs but also reduced the availability of suitable homes, particularly in high-value areas.
“What agents are seeing in practice is a growing regional imbalance. Buyers in London and the South are disproportionately affected, highlighting that current national boundaries no longer reflect local market conditions.
“Stamp duty continues to act as a barrier to entry and wider market movement and should be reviewed, including considering more flexible or regionally aligned thresholds to better support first-time buyers and improve overall housing mobility.”
