The Budget & The Housing Market
After weeks of speculation and more leaks than a downed canoe, we finally got the winter budget and for the housing market… not a lot has changed.
But, in order to make a bit of better sense out of it, we’ve decided to take a look at a few of the headlines and see what if any changes could apply to buying or selling a home in and around Chester over the next year.
1. New “mansion tax” surcharge on homes worth £2 million+ from 2028
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The Budget confirms that properties valued over £2 million will face a new annual surcharge on top of council tax, starting April 2028. For example: £2,500 a year for homes in the £2.0–2.5 m range, rising to £7,500+ for properties above £5 million. Rightmove+2Introducer Today+2
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Impact on buyers/sellers: For the typical Chester home — well below £2 m — this probably won’t matter directly. However, for sellers or buyers of high-end homes (such as upper-end detached, period, or luxury houses), it adds a future running cost, which could soften demand in the top segment (or prompt buyers to negotiate harder). For high-end sellers, it may mean accepting lower net proceeds or facing a smaller buyer pool.
2. No new annual tax on homes worth over £500,000
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Despite speculation, the Budget avoided introducing a tax on “mid-value” homes (e.g. £500 k+), which many had feared. Zoopla+1
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Impact: That’s good news for buyers and sellers especially with those in nice family homes in and around Chester. It reduces the risk of a big “cliff edge” in demand above a certain price band. In short: for many, the Budget brings certainty, not a surprise cost.
3. Stamp Duty rules remain unchanged — for now
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The Budget did not overhaul or scrap stamp duty, as had been widely rumoured. Rightmove+1
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Impact: That means moving costs for buyers remain as they were, so existing buyer budgets remain valid. For sellers, there is no new disincentive due to a changed duty regime. Essentially: no shock to transaction costs.
4. Landlords face higher income tax on rental income — from April 2027
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Income tax on rental income (i.e. from buy-to-let) goes up by 2 percentage points across basic, higher, and additional rate bands. The Standard+1
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Impact: Could reduce the attractiveness of buy-to-let investments, which in turn might reduce competition among investors for houses/apartments in the local market. For buyers seeking a home rather than a rental investment, this could slightly boost competition among owner-occupiers or help keep pricing more stable. For sellers marketing to investors, they may need to adjust the expected yield.
5. Forecast for modest house-price growth and slow but rising transactions through to 2030
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According to the budget’s outlook, house prices are forecast to rise to about £305,000 by 2030 (from around £260,000 in 2024). Estate Agent Today+1
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Property transaction volumes are also forecast to gradually increase toward 2029. Estate Agent Today+1
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Impact: For Cheshire/Chester sellers, this suggests that values may gradually rise, which can be a talking point for vendors considering whether to sell soon. For buyers, especially first-time or moving-up buyers, it suggests some urgency: over the medium term, modest price inflation is likely, so waiting indefinitely could gradually increase entry costs.