Less than 400 inner-London properties stamp duty exempt

There are just 387 properties currently for sale at £300,000 or less in London Travel Zones 1 and 2 that would be stamp duty exempt for first-time buyers, according to HouseSimple data.

Related topics:  Finance News
Rozi Jones
22nd January 2018
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" Unfortunately for the young London buyer, the stamp duty cut, while beneficial to large swathes of the country, won’t make much of a dent in their house buying budget. "

Extending the search area to include Travel Zone 3, the number of stamp duty exempt properties increases to 1,235.

Not surprisingly, the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea has the fewest stamp duty exempt properties, with just six, including a tiny 113 square foot studio flat, in SW5, Earls Court. The boroughs of Camden and City of Westminster, both have just 18 stamp duty exempt properties currently on the market.

First time buyers should head to the borough of Croydon for the largest number of stamp duty exempt properties on the market today. Croydon has 795 properties at £300k or less, more than double the number in any other London borough.

However more encouragingly, there are 4,490 properties in Zone 1-2, and 7,687 properties in Zone 1-3 that are on the market at between £300,001 and £500,000, and would be eligible for a £5,000 stamp duty cut under the new rules.

Sam Mitchell, CEO of HouseSimple, commented: “The Chancellor wheeled out his big tax break offering last Autumn to help first-time buyers and attract young voters. Unfortunately for the young London buyer, the stamp duty cut, while beneficial to large swathes of the country, won’t make much of a dent in their house buying budget.

“Even a stamp duty saving of £5,000 on properties up to £500,000, which is not something to be sniffed at, won’t be much help if first-time buyers don’t have the funds in the first place to put down substantial deposits needed to buy even a basic starter home in Inner London.

“London is seeing an exodus of young professionals, who would prefer to move to more affordable areas of the country, than buy in outer London, and face long commutes every day. With the growth of business hubs in many other major cities, and the cost of housing considerably lower than in the capital, London is no longer the economic draw it used to be.”

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