Daily Mail

WE CAN’T AFFORD TO DOWNSIZE!

They’re rattling around in large family homes and itching to move — but retired couples such as Jim and Simone say massive stamp duty bills mean...

- By Jeff Prestridge jeff.prestridge@dailymail.co.uk

SIMONe and Jim Steele love their four-bedroom bungalow which they have lived in for 40 years. Their back garden, a third of an acre of manicured beauty, is the talk of the street and overlooks the picturesqu­e Preseli Hills.

‘I never get bored of the view from our garden,’ says 69-year-old Simone, a retired land charges officer for the local council. ‘The light sometimes changes by the hour, giving me an ever-changing perspectiv­e on the world beyond our four walls.’

But the Steeles, who live just outside Haverfordw­est in Pembrokesh­ire, are getting increasing­ly frustrated. With 75-year-old Jim now in poor health, they are keen to downsize to a smaller property with a more manageable garden.

Yet they simply can’t afford to do so — and one of the biggest impediment­s is stamp duty.

To downsize to a property they like would land them with a hefty stamp duty bill — with estate agents’ fees, solicitors’ fees and moving costs on top.

‘I am sure that if stamp duty was abolished,’ says Simone, ‘ more people of our age would downsize, freeing up larger properties for younger generation­s to buy.’

She says that many of the homeowners in the street they live on are in a similar position — keen to move to a smaller property, but unable to do so because of stamp duty.

Like the Steeles, hundreds of readers have contacted Money Mail in the past seven days, backing the campaign we launched to get Chancellor Jeremy Hunt to cut stamp duty (or, even better, abolish it) in next month’s Budget.

NEARLY all believe — like us — that its scrapping would help free up a bogged- down housing market. It would enable people to move up the property ladder more easily during their working and family lives — and then back down it in retirement as they downsize.

The benefits would go well beyond the housing market. It would increase job mobility, allowing people to move from one end of the country to the other in pursuit of better job opportunit­ies.

It would also be an economic boost, with people spending money on doing up their new homes.

Our campaign has already received political support.

In The Mail on Sunday three days ago, former housing secretary robert Jenrick called on the Government to ‘ cut one of the most counter-productive and anti-growth taxes’. He added: ‘It [stamp duty] traps people in homes they want to move from and makes the elderly reluctant to downsize, which in turn leaves younger families in smaller houses.’

Unlike other tax cuts, lower stamp duty would ‘create an immediate feel-good factor’, he said.

Michael Gove, Jenrick’s successor as housing secretary, is also keen on a stamp duty cut. Last weekend, Gove said he was constantly pressing the Chancellor to introduce measures to make housing more affordable. as well as a stamp duty cut, Gove wants Hunt to help first-time buyers via the introducti­on of state-backed 99 per cent mortgages.

For home movers, stamp duty is currently charged on a sliding scale with the first £250,000 of a property’s purchase price tax-free. Thereafter, the rate jumps abruptly, from 5 pc on the value from £250,001 to £925,000; 10 pc from £925,001 to £1.5 million; and 12 pc on any surplus.

So, someone moving to a house costing £500,000 must pay stamp duty of £12,500, although from april 2025 this would rise to £18,750 if the nil-rate band fell back to £125,000 as the Government said it will.

Like the Steeles, Clare Lake and her partner allan are keen to downsize. They live just outside Falmouth in Cornwall in a fivebedroo­m house that they used to run as a B&B.

But with Clare turning 69 on Friday and allan celebratin­g his 70th next week, the house is now beyond their needs, and they are keen to move closer to Clare’s brother and son in Southampto­n and Lymington, respective­ly.

‘allan is not in great health,’ says Clare, ‘and the stairs are sometimes a struggle for him. also, public transport in Cornwall is not brilliant and our Barclays bank in Falmouth has shut.’

Clare, a textile designer, says: ‘We have no wish to move into a shoe box, but even if we could find a three-bedroom bungalow, we’ve worked out that we would be waving goodbye to around £50,000 in moving costs, a big chunk of which would be stamp duty. Surely it is time for the Government to overhaul this unfairest of taxes?’

Clare says the Government should do more to encourage the elderly to downsize.

She explains: ‘ Maybe, once homeowners reach State pension age, the Government could reduce the stamp duty yoke for them — as it does for first-time buyers.’

Currently, first-time buyers can buy a property up to £425,000 in value and pay no stamp duty. above this value, the rate is 5 pc up to £625,000 — properties worth more do not qualify for the relief.

a similarly large tax-free band, or a lower stamp duty rate, for retired downsizers, says Clare, would be a gamechange­r. ‘It would change the mathematic­s of moving straight away,’ she says, ‘and free up the housing market.’

Barbara Bass, a 70- year- old retired pharmacist from redbridge in essex, believes stamp duty should be abolished. ‘It’s a horrible tax,’ she says. ‘You strive to better yourself by moving up the housing ladder — and the Government rewards you by slapping a tax on you every time you move. I see no justificat­ion for it. It’s like pouring money down a drain.’

Barbara says her son David is desperate to move to a larger house in epping, essex. He and his wife have two children, aged two and three, and while they live in a threebedro­om house, it’s hard to insulate; the garden is tiny; and it backs on to the London undergroun­d.

But they have been thwarted by onerous stamp duty costs. Barbara says: ‘In David’s case, he’s now trapped in a house inappropri­ate for his family’s needs.’

research by Coventry Building Society shows that many homebuyers are digging into their home deposit to pay their stamp duty bill. Jonathan Stinton, head of mortgage relations, says it adds ‘to the long list of reasons why stamp duty should be top of the Chancellor’s priorities next month in the Budget.’ We agree.

Is stamp duty putting you off moving home? Write to jeff.prestridge@dailymail.co.uk

 ?? ?? Trapped: Would-be downsizers Jim and Simone want stamp duty abolished
Trapped: Would-be downsizers Jim and Simone want stamp duty abolished

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