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Scots Property Tax: 10% above £250k
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Feck me. 12% on that one Scooter was waving about at the weekend . Or £132k
I imagine the asking price will be dropping shortly
Edit: here it isLast edited by barrydidit; 10 October 2014, 07:11. -
Do read the article you numpty. You'll always spend less tax buying a home in Scotland now.
First £135k = no tax
£135k - £250k = 2%
£250k+ 10%
A property bought at £300,000 in 2015 would mean a £7,300 charge [0% of £135,000; 2% of £115,000 and 10% of £50,000]. With stamp duty for a house at this price currently at 3%, the stamp duty payment would be £9,000."Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and beat you with experience". Mark TwainComment
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Ok, so the one you linked to would be £89,300, not £132,000. Still a bit more than £55,000 which is the rate (flat 5%) it'll replace.Originally posted by scooterscot View PostYou'll always spend less tax buying a home in Scotland now.
It's a better way of doing it, certainly. Stamp duty bands as they stand are a right old pain in the arse, but 10% on anything from £250 to a million seems a bit steep.Comment
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Once you go past 325,000 you start to lose out and we would have had to pay quite a bit more.
More populist bulltulip.Comment
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Is this the same as the English system where it's on the whole value, or is it 10% on everything above £250k?Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Nope its tiered rates. its 10% on everything above £250k...Originally posted by d000hg View PostIs this the same as the English system where it's on the whole value, or is it 10% on everything above £250k?
people are better of if the house is less than £325,000merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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I hate that the English system isn't like that. Even if the bands were shifted so it didn't affect what my house cost at all, it just seems inherently broken to have such a step-change. In communities where the prices are generally not above £250k they all hit that ceiling and stop, while other communities above the ceiling carry on increasing in value.Originally posted by eek View PostNope its tiered rates. its 10% on everything above £250k...
people are better of if the house is less than £325,000Originally posted by MaryPoppinsI'd still not breastfeed a naziOriginally posted by vetranUrine is quite nourishingComment
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Yep, currently anything within 10% of the bottom of a band drops to the top of the previous bandOriginally posted by d000hg View PostI hate that the English system isn't like that. Even if the bands were shifted so it didn't affect what my house cost at all, it just seems inherently broken to have such a step-change. In communities where the prices are generally not above £250k they all hit that ceiling and stop, while other communities above the ceiling carry on increasing in value.merely at clientco for the entertainmentComment
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