⏰ 60-Day HMRC Deadline Applies

UK Capital Gains Tax Calculator on Property 2026/27

Free Capital Gains Tax calculator for UK residential property. Calculate CGT on a buy-to-let, second home or investment property at current 18% / 24% HMRC rates — including Private Residence Relief, joint ownership and the £3,000 Annual Exempt Amount.

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Property Details

Dates

Private Residence Relief

Your Income (This Tax Year)

Enter total annual income before tax. Determines whether your gain is taxed at 18% or 24%.

Estimated Capital Gains Tax Due
£0
Effective rate: 0%
Gross Gain
£0
Your Share
£0
Taxable Gain
£0
Net After CGT
£0
Selling price£0
Less: Selling costs£0
Less: Purchase price£0
Less: Purchase costs£0
Less: Enhancement costs£0
Total gain£0
Your ownership share (100%)£0
Less: Private Residence Relief£0
Less: Additional reliefs / losses£0
Less: Annual Exempt Amount (£3,000)£0
Taxable gain£0
Taxed at 18% (basic rate band)£0
Taxed at 24% (higher rate band)£0
Capital Gains Tax due£0
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How Capital Gains Tax on UK Property Works in 2026/27

Capital Gains Tax (CGT) is the tax you pay on the profit ("gain") when you sell or dispose of a UK residential property that isn't your main home. The tax is charged on the gain, not the total sale price — so understanding what's deductible can significantly reduce your bill.

For the 2026/27 tax year, CGT on residential property is charged at two rates: 18% if your gain falls within your remaining basic rate Income Tax band, and 24% on any portion above that band. These rates apply to second homes, buy-to-let properties, holiday homes, inherited properties, and any UK residential property that hasn't been your only or main home throughout ownership.

The Five-Step CGT Calculation

  1. Calculate your gross gain: Sale price minus selling costs minus purchase price minus purchase costs minus capital improvements.
  2. Apply your ownership share: If jointly owned, multiply the gain by your percentage share.
  3. Deduct Private Residence Relief (PRR): If the property was ever your main home, calculate the qualifying period.
  4. Subtract the Annual Exempt Amount: £3,000 per person for 2026/27.
  5. Apply the correct rate: 18% within basic rate band, 24% above.

What Counts as Residential Property?

HMRC defines residential property as any property that's used or suitable for use as a dwelling. This includes buy-to-let properties, second homes, holiday lets, inherited properties, and the gardens or grounds of these properties up to 0.5 hectares. Commercial property and most furnished holiday lets are subject to the lower 18%/24% rates for "other assets" — though this distinction has narrowed since October 2024 when the rates were aligned.

What Doesn't Count

You don't pay CGT on your main residence (Private Residence Relief), property held in an ISA, transfers to a spouse or civil partner, or property left to a UK-registered charity. If you sell your only home and meet all PRR conditions, no CGT is due.

UK Capital Gains Tax Rates on Property (2026/27)

For the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027), HMRC charges Capital Gains Tax on UK residential property at two rates depending on your total taxable income.

Scenario2026/27 RateApplies To
Basic rate band18%Gains within remaining basic rate Income Tax band (up to £50,270 total income + gain)
Higher rate band24%Gains above the basic rate threshold
Trustees24%All trust gains on residential property
Personal representatives24%Estate disposals during administration period
Annual Exempt Amount£3,000Per individual, per tax year (£1,500 for most trusts)

How the Rate Bands Actually Work

The tricky part: your CGT rate depends on your total income plus gain, not just the gain itself. The personal allowance for 2026/27 is £12,570 and the basic rate band covers the next £37,700 — meaning the higher rate kicks in at £50,270 total taxable amount.

Example: If you earn £40,000 from your job and sell a buy-to-let with a £50,000 taxable gain, only £10,270 of your gain (the remaining basic band) is taxed at 18%. The rest (£39,730) is taxed at 24%. Our calculator handles this automatically.

What Changed in 2026/27?

The headline residential property rates of 18%/24% were unchanged in the Autumn Budget 2025. However, Business Asset Disposal Relief jumped from 14% to 18% on 6 April 2026 — relevant if you're disposing of a buy-to-let business or furnished holiday let portfolio.

5 Worked CGT Examples for UK Property

Real-world scenarios showing how Capital Gains Tax is calculated for different property situations in 2026/27.

Example 1: Buy-to-Let Sale (Higher Rate Taxpayer)

Sarah earns £60,000 a year. She bought a buy-to-let in 2014 for £180,000 (with £5,000 costs), spent £20,000 on a loft conversion, and sells in July 2026 for £310,000 with £6,500 selling costs. She never lived in the property.
Sale price£310,000
Less: Selling costs(£6,500)
Less: Purchase price(£180,000)
Less: Purchase costs(£5,000)
Less: Enhancement costs(£20,000)
Gross gain£98,500
Less: Annual Exempt Amount(£3,000)
Taxable gain£95,500
£95,500 taxed at 24% (all in higher band)£22,920
CGT due£22,920

Example 2: Joint Ownership (Married Couple)

James and Priya jointly own a second home (50/50). They bought it in 2018 for £220,000 (+£8,000 costs), now selling for £320,000 (with £6,000 selling costs). James earns £35,000, Priya earns £25,000.
Total gain (£320,000 − £6,000 − £220,000 − £8,000)£86,000
James's 50% share£43,000
Less: James's AEA (£3,000)(£3,000)
James's taxable gain (all in basic band: £50,270 − £35,000 = £15,270 left)£40,000
£15,270 × 18% + £24,730 × 24%£8,684
Priya's 50% share£43,000
Less: Priya's AEA(£3,000)
Priya's taxable gain£40,000
Priya has £25,270 basic band left (£50,270 − £25,000)
£25,270 × 18% + £14,730 × 24%£8,084
Total CGT for couple£16,768

By owning jointly, the couple uses two AEAs and two basic rate bands, saving roughly £4,000 vs single ownership.

Example 3: Property Lived In Then Let (Partial PRR)

Tom bought a flat in January 2016 for £150,000 (+£4,000 costs). He lived there for 4 years (48 months) then let it out for 4 more years. Sells July 2026 for £260,000 with £5,500 selling costs. Higher rate taxpayer.
Total gain (£260,000 − £5,500 − £150,000 − £4,000)£100,500
Total ownership: 126 months
PRR qualifying months: 48 (lived) + 9 (final period) = 57
PRR (£100,500 × 57/126)£45,464
Gain after PRR£55,036
Less: Annual Exempt Amount(£3,000)
Taxable gain£52,036
All taxed at 24% (higher rate)£12,489
CGT due£12,489

Example 4: Inherited Property Sale

Margaret inherited a property in March 2024 worth £280,000 at probate. She sells it in September 2026 for £315,000 with £6,000 selling costs. Earns £45,000.
Sale price£315,000
Less: Selling costs(£6,000)
Less: Probate value (base cost)(£280,000)
Gross gain£29,000
Less: Annual Exempt Amount(£3,000)
Taxable gain£26,000
Basic band remaining: £50,270 − £45,000 = £5,270
£5,270 × 18% + £20,730 × 24%£5,924
CGT due£5,924

No CGT on the inheritance itself — only on the gain since probate.

Example 5: Loss-Making Sale

David sells a buy-to-let bought in 2007 at the market peak for £290,000 (+£10,000 costs). Sells in 2026 for £270,000 with £5,000 costs. Has £8,000 of capital gains from share sales in the same year.
Property sale calculation
£270,000 − £5,000 − £290,000 − £10,000(£35,000)
Capital loss carried into year£35,000
Other gains in same year (shares)£8,000
Loss offset against gains(£8,000)
Loss carried forward£27,000
CGT due (this year)£0

£27,000 loss can be carried forward indefinitely against future gains. Must be reported within 4 years.

CGT Reliefs and Allowances on UK Property

Several legitimate reliefs can reduce — or eliminate — your Capital Gains Tax bill on a UK property disposal. Most self-filers fail to claim everything they're entitled to.

Private Residence Relief (PRR)

The most valuable property CGT relief. PRR exempts the proportion of your gain that relates to periods when the property was your only or main home. The final 9 months of ownership always qualify, even if you weren't living there at the time, provided the property was your main home at some point.

Calculation: (months as main home + 9) ÷ total months of ownership × gain. So if you owned a property for 10 years (120 months) and lived in it for the first 4 years (48 months), PRR exempts (48 + 9) ÷ 120 = 47.5% of the gain.

Annual Exempt Amount (AEA)

Each individual gets £3,000 of tax-free gains per tax year for 2026/27. Spouses each have their own — so a married couple has £6,000 of combined annual exemption. Trusts get £1,500 (or £3,000 if the beneficiary is vulnerable).

Capital Losses

Losses on other chargeable assets sold in the same tax year — shares, crypto, other property — can be offset against your property gain. Unused losses can be carried forward indefinitely. Losses must be claimed within 4 years of the end of the tax year in which they arose.

Lettings Relief (Rare Now)

Since April 2020, Lettings Relief only applies if you shared occupation of the property with a tenant. Most landlords no longer qualify. Where it does apply, relief is the lower of: PRR claimed, the chargeable lettings gain, or £40,000.

Spousal Transfers

Transfers between spouses or civil partners are made on a no-gain/no-loss basis. Transferring a share of a property to your spouse before sale can use both individuals' £3,000 AEAs and both basic rate bands — often saving thousands. The transfer must be a genuine legal transfer of beneficial ownership, properly documented.

Allowable Costs Most People Forget

  • Original Stamp Duty Land Tax paid at purchase
  • Legal fees on purchase and sale
  • Survey and mortgage valuation fees
  • Estate agent commission
  • Capital improvements: extensions, loft conversions, new kitchens, conservatories
  • Costs of establishing or defending title to the property

Not deductible: routine repairs and maintenance, mortgage interest (already deducted from rental income), buildings insurance, council tax during void periods.

8 Legal Ways to Reduce Your CGT Bill on Property

These strategies are 100% HMRC-compliant. Most require planning before the sale completes.

1. Transfer a share to your spouse

Use both £3,000 AEAs and both basic rate bands. Can save £3,000–£8,000+ in CGT. Must be a genuine transfer.

2. Time the sale across tax years

If you have multiple disposals, splitting them across two tax years uses two AEAs and may keep more gain in the lower band.

3. Claim every allowable cost

Dig out original SDLT, legal, survey, and improvement receipts. £20,000 of forgotten costs = £4,800 CGT saved at higher rate.

4. Maximise PRR if you've lived there

Even short periods as a main home count. The final 9 months always qualify. Get the apportionment right.

5. Realise capital losses in the same year

Sell loss-making investments (shares, crypto) in the same tax year as the property to offset gains.

6. Use ISA / pension contributions

Reducing taxable income with pension contributions can keep more of your gain in the lower 18% band.

7. Consider EIS reinvestment

Reinvesting the gain in qualifying EIS shares within 3 years defers CGT. Specialist advice needed.

8. Check your residency status

Non-UK residents face different rules. Some qualify for the new resident regime from April 2025.

6 Common CGT Mistakes That Cost You Money

From years of filing CGT returns, these are the mistakes we see most often — and what they cost.

❌ Forgetting purchase costs

SDLT, legal, survey, and broker fees from years ago. Easy to forget but worth thousands. Dig out completion statements.

❌ Missing the 60-day deadline

Automatic £100 penalty + £10/day after 3 months + 5% of tax due at 6 months. Easily £1,000+ in unnecessary penalties.

❌ Confusing repairs with improvements

New kitchen = improvement (deductible). Replacing a broken oven = repair (not deductible). Get this wrong, lose the deduction.

❌ Wrong PRR calculation

Counting weeks instead of months, forgetting the final 9-month rule, or claiming PRR on rented periods. Triggers HMRC enquiries.

❌ Not using spousal transfers

Selling solo when joint ownership would have used two AEAs. Often a £3,000–£8,000 mistake.

❌ Ignoring carried-forward losses

Capital losses from previous years can offset current gains. Many people forget to claim them.

The 60-Day CGT Reporting Rule Explained

Since 27 October 2021, UK residents disposing of residential property must report and pay any CGT due within 60 days of completion. This is separate from your annual Self Assessment — you can't wait until January to file.

Who Must File a 60-Day Return?

  • Anyone disposing of UK residential property where CGT is due
  • Non-UK residents disposing of UK property (regardless of whether tax is due)
  • Trustees and personal representatives of estates

You don't need to file if: the property was your main home (full PRR), the gain is below £3,000 (covered by AEA), or you sold at a loss.

How to File

  1. Log in to HMRC's UK Property Disposal service (you'll need a Government Gateway account)
  2. Provide property details, dates, sale price, costs, and reliefs claimed
  3. HMRC calculates the tax and gives you a payment reference
  4. Pay the tax within 60 days via bank transfer, card, or direct debit
  5. The gain is also included in your Self Assessment for the relevant tax year

Penalties for Late Filing

LatenessPenalty
Day 1 lateAutomatic £100 fixed penalty
3 months late£10/day for up to 90 days (max £900)
6 months late5% of tax due (minimum £300)
12 months lateFurther 5% of tax due (minimum £300)
Late paymentInterest at HMRC official rate (currently 7.75%)

A £25,000 CGT bill filed 6 months late = £100 + £900 + £1,250 = £2,250 in penalties alone, plus interest. Filing on time is always cheaper.

Non-Resident CGT on UK Property

If you're not a UK tax resident but own UK residential property, special rules apply when you sell.

What's Taxable

Non-residents must pay UK CGT on any gain made on UK residential property sold or disposed of after 6 April 2015. You can use the property's value at 5 April 2015 as your base cost (rebasing) — meaning only growth since 2015 is taxable. Alternatively, you can elect to use the original purchase price if it's more beneficial.

Filing Requirements

Non-residents must file a Non-Resident CGT Return within 60 days of completion, regardless of whether tax is due. This is the same 60-day window as UK residents, but applies even when no tax is owed (different from UK residents who only file when CGT is due).

Available Reliefs

Non-residents are entitled to the same Annual Exempt Amount (£3,000) as UK residents. Private Residence Relief is available, but with restrictions — the property must have been your only or main home and you must meet a "90-day rule" for any tax year you're claiming relief in.

Non-resident CGT is one of the most complex areas of UK tax. Contact us if you're a non-resident selling UK property — we handle these returns regularly.

Why sellers hand their CGT return to us

Filing looks simple until you realise what's at stake. Here's what you get for a fixed fee.

60-day deadline handled

We file through HMRC's UK Property Disposal service on your behalf. No Government Gateway stress, no missed deadlines, no penalties.

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Every relief identified

PRR, Lettings Relief, spousal transfers, allowable costs you forgot about. We check every angle HMRC allows — often saving more than our fee.

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Fixed fee, no surprises

Quoted upfront before we start. Complex cases quoted on day one. No hourly billing, no hidden costs.

What clients say

Real feedback from UK property sellers we've helped file.

★★★★★

"Sold my buy-to-let and had no idea about the 60-day rule. Fiscal Umbrella filed everything within a week, found costs I'd forgotten, and the whole thing came in under quote. Saved me a penalty and some tax."

JR
James R.
Landlord, Bedford
★★★★★

"I'd calculated my CGT myself online and thought I knew the number. Their review spotted spousal transfer planning I hadn't considered and knocked thousands off. Quick, professional, fair fee."

SK
Sarah K.
Second-home seller, Luton
★★★★★

"Used them for two disposals in the same tax year. Explained everything in plain English, handled HMRC correspondence, no nasty letters. Exactly what I wanted — will use again."

MT
Michael T.
Portfolio landlord, London

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Capital Gains Tax rate on UK residential property in 2026/27?

For the 2026/27 tax year, UK residential property gains are taxed at 18% if the gain falls within your remaining basic rate Income Tax band, and 24% if the gain falls above the basic rate threshold of £50,270. The Annual Exempt Amount of £3,000 per person applies first.

Do I have to pay Capital Gains Tax when I sell my main home?

Generally no. Your main residence is exempt from CGT under Private Residence Relief, provided the property has been your only or main home throughout the period of ownership. If you let part of it, used part exclusively for business, or had long periods of absence, partial relief may apply.

When do I need to report and pay CGT on a UK property sale?

UK residents must report the disposal and pay any CGT due within 60 days of the completion date using HMRC's UK Property Disposal online service. Non-UK residents must also file within 60 days, regardless of whether tax is due. Late filing triggers automatic penalties from £100 plus interest on unpaid tax.

What costs can I deduct from my capital gain?

You can deduct: estate agent fees, solicitor and conveyancing fees on sale, original Stamp Duty Land Tax paid at purchase, legal and survey fees on purchase, mortgage valuation fees, and capital improvements such as extensions, loft conversions and new kitchens. Routine repairs and maintenance are not deductible.

How does joint ownership affect CGT on property?

Each owner is taxed on their share of the gain. Each owner has their own £3,000 Annual Exempt Amount, so a married couple jointly owning a property has £6,000 of combined exemption. Each owner's share is taxed against their individual income, which can put more of the gain in the lower 18% band.

What is Private Residence Relief and how is it calculated?

Private Residence Relief (PRR) exempts the proportion of your gain relating to periods when the property was your main home. Calculate it as: (months lived as main home + final 9 months of ownership) ÷ total months of ownership × gain. The final 9 months always qualify even if you weren't living there, provided the property was your main home at some point.

Can I avoid CGT by transferring property to my spouse?

Transfers between spouses or civil partners are made on a no-gain/no-loss basis and don't trigger CGT. Transferring a share of a property to your spouse before sale can use both individuals' £3,000 Annual Exempt Amounts and both basic rate Income Tax bands, potentially saving thousands. This must be properly documented with legal title transferred.

What happens if I'm a non-UK resident selling UK property?

Non-UK residents disposing of UK residential property must file a Non-Resident CGT return within 60 days of completion, regardless of whether tax is due. CGT applies to any gain from April 2015 (you can use the property's April 2015 value as the base cost). Annual Exempt Amount of £3,000 applies.

How does the calculator handle Buy-to-Let properties?

For Buy-to-Let properties never lived in by the owner, no Private Residence Relief applies. The full gain (after deducting allowable costs) is subject to CGT. Our calculator handles this by leaving the PRR option unticked and applying the full gain after the £3,000 exemption to the appropriate 18%/24% bands based on your total income.

What if I made a loss on the property sale?

Capital losses can be offset against capital gains in the same tax year. If losses exceed gains, the surplus loss can be carried forward indefinitely to offset future capital gains. Losses must be reported to HMRC within 4 years of the end of the tax year in which they arose.

Do I pay CGT on inherited property?

You don't pay CGT when you inherit property — Inheritance Tax may apply to the estate instead. However, when you later sell the inherited property, CGT applies to any increase in value between the date of inheritance (the probate value) and the sale price.

How much does it cost to have an accountant file my CGT return?

Fiscal Umbrella charges a fixed fee for 60-day CGT returns, quoted upfront after a free 15-minute review. Pricing depends on the complexity of your situation — straightforward UK residential disposals are at the lower end, while non-resident or multiple-disposal cases are quoted individually. Request a free quote and you'll have a clear price within 24 hours.

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Disclaimer: This calculator provides an estimate based on 2026/27 UK tax rules for individuals who are UK resident and domiciled. It does not account for carried interest, non-resident rules, trust taxation, or Business Asset Disposal Relief. Treat the result as a guide, not final tax advice. For binding calculations and filing, book a review with a qualified accountant. Tax rules can change — always confirm with HMRC or a qualified professional before filing.