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How Much Deposit Do You Need for a New Build Home? Sizes, Saving Strategies, and How New Build Deposits Work Differently

How Much Deposit Do You Need for a New Build Home? Sizes, Saving Strategies, and How New Build Deposits Work Differently
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Quick Deposit Overview: What You Need at a Glance

Property TypeMinimum DepositRecommended DepositBest Rate ThresholdNotes
New build house5% (some lenders)10–15%25%+Most lenders accept 5–10%
New build flat10% (most lenders)15–20%25%+Many lenders require 15% minimum
Off-plan house10%15%25%+Fewer lenders; some require 15%
Off-plan flat15% (most lenders)20%25%+Limited lender choice below 15%
Shared ownership5% of your share10% of your shareN/ADeposit based on share value, not full price

These are general market patterns — individual lenders set their own criteria, and a whole-of-market mortgage broker experienced with new builds can identify which lenders will accept your deposit level for your specific property.

How New Build Deposits Work Differently

When you buy a resale property, you pay your deposit on exchange and the rest on completion — usually a few weeks apart. New builds work differently because you often reserve months before you exchange, and exchange can be months before completion. This creates a multi-stage payment structure that catches many buyers off guard.

The Three-Stage Payment Structure

StageWhenTypical AmountWhat Happens to the MoneyRefundable?
1. Reservation feeDay you choose your plot£500–£2,000 (sometimes up to £5,000)Held by developer; usually deducted from purchase priceSometimes — depends on reservation agreement terms
2. Exchange depositWhen contracts are exchanged (typically 28 days after reservation)10% of purchase price (negotiable to 5% in some cases)Held by solicitor or stakeholderNo — you lose it if you pull out after exchange
3. Completion balanceWhen keys are handed overRemaining purchase price minus mortgageTransferred to developerN/A

Stage 1: The Reservation Fee

The reservation fee takes the property off the market while solicitors prepare contracts. Key points:

  • Typical range: £500 for apartments in slower markets, up to £5,000 for premium houses in high-demand developments
  • Deducted from price: Most developers deduct the reservation fee from the total purchase price, so it forms part of your deposit — it is not an additional cost
  • Refundability: The Consumer Code for Home Builders (2024 edition) requires developers to set out clearly when the reservation fee is refundable. Many agreements give you a cooling-off period (often 10–14 days) during which you can get a full refund. After that, refundability depends on the reason for withdrawal
  • What to check: Read the reservation agreement carefully before paying. Confirm whether the fee is refundable if your mortgage is declined or if the developer delays beyond the longstop date

Stage 2: The Exchange Deposit

When you exchange contracts, you commit to buying the property. The exchange deposit is the most critical payment:

  • Standard amount: 10% of the purchase price is conventional, but some developers accept 5% — especially for first-time buyers or when market conditions favour buyers
  • Where it is held: The deposit should be held by the developer's solicitor as "stakeholder" (meaning they cannot release it to the developer until completion). If it is held as "agent" for the developer, the developer can spend it before completion — this carries risk if the developer becomes insolvent. Always ask your solicitor to negotiate stakeholder terms
  • Your reservation fee is included: If you paid a £1,000 reservation fee and the exchange deposit is 10% of a £300,000 property (£30,000), you pay £29,000 at exchange — the reservation fee makes up the difference
  • Source of funds: The exchange deposit must come from your own savings, gifts, or other provable sources. Your mortgage lender does not provide this — the mortgage funds arrive at completion

Stage 3: Completion

On completion day, the remaining balance is paid. Your mortgage lender releases the loan funds to your solicitor, who combines them with any remaining deposit and transfers the total to the developer. If your total deposit is 15% and you paid 10% at exchange, the remaining 5% comes from your savings at this stage — though some buyers arrange for their mortgage to cover the difference.

Timeline Implications

For off-plan purchases, there can be 6–24 months between exchange and completion. During this time your 10% exchange deposit is locked away. This has practical implications:

  • You cannot use that money for anything else during the build period
  • You do not earn interest on it (unless held in a stakeholder interest-bearing account — rare but worth asking)
  • If the property is down-valued by your mortgage lender at completion, you may need to find additional funds
  • If your circumstances change (job loss, relationship breakdown), you cannot easily recover the deposit after exchange

Deposit Size by LTV Tier: What You Get for Each Level

Your deposit determines your loan-to-value (LTV) ratio, which directly affects the mortgage rates available to you. The relationship is not linear — there are specific thresholds where rates drop meaningfully.

Deposit %LTVIndicative Rate (2-year fix, Feb 2026)Monthly Payment (£300k, 30yr)Lender AvailabilityNotes
5%95%5.5–6.0%£1,703–£1,799Limited for new builds; very few for new build flatsExpect higher fees; some lenders add new build loading
10%90%4.8–5.3%£1,572–£1,659Good choice for new build houses; some new build flatsThe most common starting point for new build buyers
15%85%4.4–4.9%£1,496–£1,590Wide availability for all new build typesOpens up most new build flat lenders
20%80%4.1–4.5%£1,440–£1,516Most lenders availableMeaningful rate improvement over 85% LTV
25%75%3.8–4.2%£1,385–£1,456Full market accessBest rates typically available from this tier
40%+60%3.5–3.9%£1,327–£1,399Full market accessMarginal improvement over 75% LTV

Rates are illustrative based on market conditions in early 2026. Actual rates vary by lender, borrower profile, and product type. Use these figures for comparison between tiers rather than as quotes.

The Real Cost Difference Between 5% and 15%

Consider a £300,000 new build house. The difference in monthly payments between 5% and 15% deposit is roughly £130–£210 per month. Over a 2-year fixed term, that is £3,120–£5,040 in additional interest. Meanwhile, the difference between saving £15,000 (5%) and £45,000 (15%) is £30,000 — which at the higher interest rate takes roughly 6–10 years of payment savings to recover. This is why the "save the biggest deposit possible" advice is not always correct: for many buyers, getting on the ladder sooner at 5–10% and remortgaging to a lower LTV as the property appreciates can be more effective than waiting years to save 15–20%.

New Build Lender Restrictions to Know

RestrictionWhat It MeansWorkaround
New build flat minimum LTVMany lenders cap at 80–85% LTV for new build flats (requiring 15–20% deposit)Use a broker to find lenders who accept 90% LTV on new build flats — they exist but are fewer
Off-plan restrictionsSome lenders will not lend on properties that will not be completed within 6 monthsGet a mortgage agreement in principle early, but be prepared to re-apply closer to completion
Developer incentive capsMost lenders cap the value of developer incentives at 5% of the property price (some allow less)Negotiate a price reduction instead of incentives above the cap — the effect is the same but lenders treat it differently
High-rise restrictionsSome lenders will not lend on buildings above a certain number of storeys, or require additional fire-safety documentationCheck EWS1 form requirements early; some lenders have relaxed criteria for buildings with remediation plans
New build premium concernLenders' valuers may value the property below the purchase price, effectively requiring a larger depositGet the developer to reduce the price rather than offer incentives; consider a survey early to flag potential issues

How Much Cash Do You Actually Need? Deposit Plus Other Upfront Costs

Your deposit is the largest upfront cost, but it is not the only one. Buyers who save exactly their deposit amount often find themselves short when other costs arrive. Here is a realistic picture of total cash needed:

Cost£250,000 Home (10% Deposit)£350,000 Home (10% Deposit)£450,000 Home (15% Deposit)
Deposit£25,000£35,000£67,500
Reservation fee (deducted from deposit)(£500–£1,000)(£1,000–£2,000)(£1,000–£2,000)
Solicitor / conveyancing fees£1,500–£2,500£1,800–£3,000£2,000–£3,500
Mortgage arrangement fee£0–£999£0–£999£0–£999
Mortgage valuation fee£0–£300£0–£400£0–£500
Stamp duty (SDLT)£0 (FTB relief)£2,500 (FTB) / £5,000 (standard)£11,250 (standard)
Searches and disbursements£300–£500£300–£500£300–£500
Moving costs£500–£1,500£800–£2,000£1,000–£3,000
Total Cash Needed£27,800–£30,800£40,400–£43,900£82,050–£88,000

The reservation fee is shown in brackets because it is deducted from the deposit — you pay it first, but it is not additional. First-time buyer stamp duty relief applies on properties up to £425,000 (as of April 2025 thresholds). For a comprehensive cost breakdown including furnishing and ongoing expenses, see our Complete New Build Budget Planner.

Saving for Your Deposit: Strategies That Actually Work

The Lifetime ISA (LISA)

The Lifetime ISA remains the single most effective deposit-saving tool for first-time buyers under 40:

FeatureDetail
Annual contribution limit£4,000 per tax year
Government bonus25% — up to £1,000 per year
Maximum bonus over time£33,000 bonus on £132,000 saved (age 18 to 50)
Property price cap£450,000
Must be open forAt least 12 months before using for a property purchase
Penalty for non-property withdrawal25% of the withdrawal amount (you lose the bonus plus 6.25% of your own contributions)
Cash or stocks and sharesBoth available — cash for short-term saving, S&S for 5+ year horizons

LISA Strategy for New Build Buyers

Practical example: You open a LISA today and contribute £4,000 before 5 April. You contribute another £4,000 from 6 April. After 12 months, you have £8,000 of contributions plus £2,000 in bonuses = £10,000. If you continue for 3 years at maximum contributions, you accumulate £12,000 in contributions + £3,000 bonus = £15,000 (plus any interest). That is a meaningful portion of a 5–10% deposit on a property up to £300,000.

Key timing point: Open your LISA as early as possible, even with just £1. The 12-month clock starts from the date you open it, not from when you make your main contributions. Many buyers lose months because they did not know about this requirement.

Regular Savings Accounts

Several banks offer regular savings accounts paying 5–7% on monthly deposits of £25–£300. While the absolute returns are modest, they enforce saving discipline. Consider setting up a standing order on payday so the money leaves your account before you can spend it.

Saving Milestones by Target

Target DepositMonthly SavingTime to Reach (No Bonus)Time with LISA BonusProperty Value at 10% LTV
£15,000£5002 years 6 months~2 years 2 months£150,000
£25,000£5004 years 2 months~3 years 8 months£250,000
£25,000£7502 years 10 months~2 years 6 months£250,000
£35,000£7503 years 11 months~3 years 5 months£350,000
£35,000£1,0002 years 11 months~2 years 7 months£350,000
£50,000£1,0004 years 2 months~3 years 9 months£500,000

LISA bonus estimates assume maximum annual contributions of £4,000 with 25% bonus. Actual timelines depend on interest rates and contribution patterns.

Other Deposit-Boosting Strategies

  • Reduce rent temporarily: Moving back with family for 12–24 months is the single biggest accelerator. If your rent is £900/month, that is £10,800–£21,600 freed up for your deposit
  • Salary sacrifice: Some employers allow salary sacrifice into savings schemes with tax efficiency. Check if your employer offers any house-purchase support
  • Bonus and windfall strategy: Commit to saving 100% of any bonuses, tax refunds, or one-off payments. These irregular sums add up faster than monthly savings alone
  • Reduce high-interest debt first: If you are paying 20%+ on credit cards while saving at 4%, paying off the debt first gives a better effective return. Mortgage lenders also consider your debt-to-income ratio
  • Side income: Even modest additional income (freelancing, overtime, selling unused items) directed entirely to savings can cut months off your timeline

Gifted Deposits: Rules, Requirements, and What Lenders Need

Many first-time buyers receive deposit gifts from parents or family members. Lenders accept gifted deposits but have specific requirements:

What Lenders Require

RequirementDetailWhy It Matters
Gifted deposit letterA signed letter from the giftor confirming the money is a gift, not a loan, and they have no interest in the propertyLenders need to confirm it will not need to be repaid (which would affect affordability)
Proof of sourceBank statements showing where the gift money came from (typically 3–6 months)Anti-money laundering regulations require proof of the source of all funds
Relationship to buyerMost lenders require the giftor to be an immediate family member (parent, grandparent, sibling)Some lenders will not accept gifts from friends, partners (unmarried), or distant relatives
Giftor IDPassport or driving licence copy of the giftorPart of anti-money laundering checks
No repayment expectationThe gift must be unconditional with no expectation of repaymentIf the giftor expects repayment, it is a loan and must be declared as a financial commitment

Things to Watch Out For

  • Inheritance tax implications: If the giftor dies within 7 years of making the gift, it may be subject to inheritance tax (taper relief applies). This is a tax matter, not a mortgage matter, but both parties should be aware
  • Mixed deposits: Using a combination of your own savings and a gift is completely normal and accepted by all lenders. Just document both sources clearly
  • Timing: The gift should ideally be in your bank account for at least one full statement cycle before you apply for the mortgage. Some lenders want to see it "seasoned" in your account
  • Partial gift, partial loan: If a family member wants to give some money as a gift and lend you some, declare the loan portion to your mortgage broker. Undeclared loans discovered later can void your mortgage offer

Family Assistance Alternatives to Gifting

SchemeHow It WorksFamily CommitmentKey Consideration
Family offset mortgageFamily member's savings are held in a linked account and offset against the mortgage balance, reducing interestSavings are locked for an agreed period (typically 3–5 years)Family keeps their money; it is returned after the offset period
Family deposit mortgageFamily member deposits 10% of the property value into a savings account held by the lenderSavings locked for 3–5 yearsBuyer gets 100% LTV mortgage; family gets savings back with interest
Joint borrower sole proprietorFamily member is on the mortgage but not the title deedFamily member's income is assessed for affordabilityFamily member has mortgage liability but no property ownership; affects their own borrowing capacity
Guarantor mortgageFamily member guarantees the mortgage; their property or savings provide securityFamily member's home or savings are at risk if you defaultHigh risk for the guarantor; fewer lenders offer this now

Developer Deposit Contributions: Free Money or Hidden Cost?

Many new build developers offer "deposit contributions" as an incentive — the developer effectively gives you part of your deposit. This sounds straightforward, but the reality is more nuanced.

How Developer Deposit Contributions Work

The developer agrees to pay a percentage (typically 3–5%) of the purchase price towards your deposit. In practice, this is usually structured as a price reduction rather than a cash payment — the developer gives your solicitor a credit at completion. From the lender's perspective, the property price remains unchanged, and you need less of your own cash.

The Lender Cap Problem

Most mortgage lenders cap total developer incentives at 5% of the property value. Some cap at 3% for high-LTV mortgages. If the developer offers a 5% deposit contribution plus £5,000 towards stamp duty plus free flooring upgrades worth £3,000, and the property costs £300,000, the total incentive is £23,000 — or 7.7% of the price. That exceeds most lenders' caps. The lender will either:

  • Reduce their valuation of the property by the excess incentive amount, or
  • Decline the application entirely

Price Reduction vs. Incentive

Here is the critical distinction:

ApproachLender TreatmentYour Benefit
Developer reduces price by £15,000Property valued at the lower price; LTV calculated on that amountLower purchase price, lower stamp duty, lower mortgage amount
Developer offers £15,000 "incentives" at full priceLender values at full price but may cap incentives at 5%; excess reduces their valuationHigher purchase price recorded, potentially higher stamp duty, but less cash needed upfront

Practical advice: If developer incentives exceed 5% of the property value, ask the developer to convert the excess into a price reduction. Your broker and solicitor can advise on the most advantageous structure for your situation.

Does a Deposit Contribution Affect the Valuation?

Mortgage valuers are aware of new build incentive structures. If comparable properties on the same development have sold at different prices with different incentive packages, the valuer takes this into account. A property listed at £300,000 with £15,000 of incentives may be valued at £285,000 — the effective price after incentives. If this happens and you were relying on a 90% LTV mortgage, your required deposit jumps from 10% of £300,000 (£30,000) to 10% of £285,000 (£28,500) plus the £15,000 shortfall — totalling £43,500 instead of £30,000.

This is called a "down-valuation" and is one of the biggest risks with developer-incentive-heavy purchases. Your mortgage broker should stress-test this scenario before you commit.

Shared Ownership Deposits

Shared ownership reduces the deposit barrier dramatically because you only need a deposit on the share you are buying, not the full property value:

Full Property ValueYour Share (25%)Deposit at 5% of ShareDeposit at 10% of ShareRent on Remaining 75%
£250,000£62,500£3,125£6,250~£390–£470/month
£300,000£75,000£3,750£7,500~£470–£560/month
£350,000£87,500£4,375£8,750~£550–£660/month
£400,000£100,000£5,000£10,000~£625–£750/month

Rent estimates based on typical housing association rates of 2.75% of the unsold share value per year. Actual rents vary by provider.

Shared Ownership Deposit Considerations

  • Smaller deposit, but total monthly cost is higher: You pay a mortgage on your share plus rent on the housing association's share. Always calculate total monthly costs, not just the mortgage
  • Staircasing: You can buy additional shares over time (staircasing) until you own the property outright. Each staircase purchase requires a valuation and potentially a new deposit/mortgage arrangement
  • Resale restrictions: The housing association usually has first right to find a buyer, which can slow down selling. New-model shared ownership (post-2021) allows staircasing in 1% increments for the first 15 years
  • New build shared ownership: Many new build developments include shared ownership plots, often managed by a housing association partner. The deposit process is the same as standard new builds but applied to your share value

Deposit Unlock and Other Developer Schemes

Deposit Unlock

Deposit Unlock is a scheme backed by the Home Builders Federation where participating developers provide an insurance policy to the mortgage lender, enabling 95% LTV mortgages on new builds — including flats — that would otherwise require larger deposits. Key features:

  • Available through specific lenders (the developer arranges the insurance, not the buyer)
  • Allows 5% deposit on new build houses and flats from participating developers
  • The developer pays an insurance premium to cover the lender's additional risk
  • You do not pay for the insurance — it is the developer's cost
  • Not all developments participate; ask the developer whether they are enrolled in Deposit Unlock

Other Developer Deposit Assistance

Scheme TypeHow It WorksWatch Out For
Assisted moveDeveloper helps sell your existing home (estate agent fees, part-exchange)Part-exchange typically offers 90–95% of market value — you may get more selling independently
Part-exchangeDeveloper buys your current home and applies the equity to your new build depositConvenient but you are unlikely to get full market value; get independent valuations for comparison
Key worker schemesSome developers and housing associations offer deposit discounts for NHS workers, teachers, emergency servicesEligibility criteria vary; often limited to specific developments
Forces Help to BuyMinistry of Defence scheme lending up to 50% of salary (max £25,000) interest-free for Armed Forces personnelMust be a regular service member; the loan must be repaid and is treated as a commitment by lenders

Deposit Protection During Off-Plan Builds

If you exchange on an off-plan property and pay your 10% deposit, that money sits with someone for months or even years. Protecting it is critical:

Stakeholder vs. Agent

Deposit Held AsWhat It MeansYour Risk
StakeholderThe solicitor holds the deposit and cannot release it to the developer until completionLow — your deposit is protected even if the developer goes bust before completion
AgentThe solicitor holds the deposit on behalf of the developer, who can access it immediatelyHigh — if the developer becomes insolvent, your deposit may be lost (you become an unsecured creditor)

Always insist on stakeholder terms. If the developer insists on agent terms, your solicitor should advise you on the additional risk. Some buyer protection insurance policies cover deposit loss in the event of developer insolvency — ask your solicitor about these.

NHBC and Other Warranty Provider Protections

The NHBC Buildmark policy provides deposit protection of up to £100,000 if the developer is registered with NHBC and goes insolvent before completion. Similar protections exist with LABC, Premier Guarantee, and other warranty providers. Check:

  • Is the developer registered with a recognised warranty provider?
  • Does the warranty cover your deposit in the pre-completion period?
  • What is the maximum deposit protection amount?
  • Does the protection apply regardless of whether deposits are held as stakeholder or agent?

Worked Deposit Examples by Buyer Type

Example 1: First-Time Buyer — Apartment at £250,000

ItemAmountNotes
Purchase price£250,000New build apartment
Deposit target10% = £25,000Minimum for most new build flat lenders
Own savings£15,000Saved over 2 years
LISA balance + bonus£5,000£4,000 saved + £1,000 bonus (1 year)
Gift from parents£5,000With gifted deposit letter and proof of source
Total deposit£25,00010% LTV achieved
Additional cash needed (fees, costs)£3,000–£4,500Solicitor, searches, moving
Total cash required£28,000–£29,500

Example 2: Second-Time Buyer — Family House at £350,000

ItemAmountNotes
Purchase price£350,000New build 3-bed semi
Deposit target15% = £52,500Targeting 85% LTV for better rates
Equity from existing home sale£65,000After repaying mortgage and sale costs
Total deposit available£65,00018.6% — between 85% and 80% LTV tiers
Option: increase to 20% = £70,000£5,000 additional savingsUnlocks 80% LTV rates — saving ~£30–50/month
Stamp duty (standard rate)£5,000£350,000 purchase; no FTB relief for second-timers
Other costs£4,000–£6,000Solicitor, searches, moving, etc.
Total cash required (with 15% deposit)£61,500–£63,500

Example 3: Shared Ownership Buyer — House at £300,000 (25% Share)

ItemAmountNotes
Full property value£300,000New build 2-bed house
Your share (25%)£75,000
Deposit at 10% of share£7,500Only 2.5% of the full property value
Mortgage on your share£67,500
Monthly mortgage (4.5%, 30yr)~£342
Monthly rent on 75% (at 2.75%)~£516
Service charge~£100–£150
Total monthly cost~£958–£1,008
Solicitor and other fees£2,000–£3,500
Total cash required£9,500–£11,000The lowest deposit route onto the new build ladder

Example 4: Off-Plan Buyer — House at £400,000

StageWhenAmountCumulative Cash Committed
Reservation feeJanuary 2026£2,000£2,000
Exchange deposit (10% minus reservation)February 2026£38,000£40,000
Solicitor fees on exchangeFebruary 2026£1,500£41,500
Build periodFebruary 2026 – January 2027£0 (but deposit is locked)£41,500
Mortgage valuation feeDecember 2026£400£41,900
Completion: additional deposit (5% to reach 15%)January 2027£20,000£61,900
Stamp dutyJanuary 2027£7,500 (FTB)£69,400
Remaining solicitor feesJanuary 2027£1,000£70,400
Moving costsJanuary 2027£1,500£71,900

This example illustrates the cash-flow challenge of off-plan buying: you need £41,500 upfront and then a further £30,400 approximately 12 months later. Planning these two cash milestones is essential — see our Complete Guide to Buying Off-Plan for the full process.

Common Deposit Mistakes to Avoid

MistakeWhat Goes WrongHow to Avoid It
Not opening a LISA early enough12-month minimum holding period means you cannot use it even if you have the moneyOpen a LISA immediately with even £1; you can add funds later
Saving exactly the deposit amountSolicitor fees, searches, and other costs leave you shortBudget for deposit + 10–15% extra for fees and costs
Not declaring all deposit sourcesMortgage offer delayed or withdrawn if undeclared sources are discovered during checksTell your broker about every source of deposit funds upfront — savings, gifts, loans, investments
Gifted deposit without proper documentationSolicitor cannot proceed without proof of source; delays exchangeGet the gifted deposit letter, ID, and bank statements from the giftor before you need them
Relying entirely on developer incentivesLender caps incentives; down-valuation wipes out the benefitHave a fallback plan if the lender values the property below the purchase price
Forgetting stamp duty is separate from depositStamp duty is due on completion and is not part of your deposit — but it is a large cash cost (second-time buyers especially)Calculate stamp duty separately and ensure those funds are available alongside your deposit
Assuming 5% is always available for new buildsMany lenders require 10–15% for new build flats and off-plan; 5% may only be available through Deposit UnlockCheck specific lender criteria for your property type before assuming deposit level
Moving deposit money around before completionSolicitor needs a clear audit trail; moving money between accounts creates compliance questionsKeep deposit funds in one account once you start the buying process. If you must move funds, keep clear records

Deposit Checklist: Before You Reserve

ActionWhy It Matters
Confirm your total deposit amount and source documentationMortgage application requires proof of every pound
Get a mortgage agreement in principle for a new build at your deposit levelConfirms lenders will lend on a new build at your LTV — not all will
Check LISA eligibility and 12-month rule if applicableCannot use LISA funds if account is less than 12 months old
If using a gifted deposit, prepare the letter, ID, and bank statements nowDelays at this stage hold up the entire purchase
Calculate stamp duty separately from your deposit budgetStamp duty is a separate cash cost — do not include it in your deposit figure
Budget an additional £3,000–£5,000 for fees and moving costsThese costs are on top of your deposit and stamp duty
Ask the developer about Deposit Unlock or deposit contribution schemesMay allow a lower deposit than standard lender requirements
Ask your solicitor to negotiate stakeholder deposit termsProtects your exchange deposit if the developer faces financial difficulty
Understand the reservation agreement refund terms before payingKnow your rights before the reservation fee leaves your account
Have contingency funds for a potential down-valuationIf the lender values the property below the purchase price, you need to cover the difference

Stamp Duty and Your Deposit: A Quick Reference

Stamp duty (SDLT in England and Northern Ireland) is separate from your deposit but is a major cash cost that must be available at completion. Current rates from April 2025:

Price BandFirst-Time Buyer RateStandard RateAdditional Property Rate
Up to £125,0000% (nil-rate up to £300,000 for FTB)0%5%
£125,001–£250,0000% (within FTB nil-rate)2%7%
£250,001–£300,0000% (within FTB nil-rate)5%10%
£300,001–£425,0005% (FTB relief applies up to £425,000)5%10%
£425,001–£925,0005% (no FTB relief above £425,000)5%10%
£925,001–£1,500,00010%10%15%
Over £1,500,00012%12%17%

Scotland uses Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) with a nil-rate band of £145,000 and 8% additional dwelling supplement. Wales uses Land Transaction Tax (LTT) with a nil-rate band of £225,000 and 4% higher rates surcharge. For a full stamp duty breakdown with worked examples, see our Complete New Build Budget Planner.

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