SDLT 3% (Now 5%) Surcharge Refund When Selling Former Home

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Can you reclaim the 3% SDLT surcharge if your previous home is sold within 3 years?
Introduction
Many buyers pay the higher rates of Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) when they buy a new dwelling before selling their old one. A common question is whether that extra 3% can later be reclaimed once the former home is sold. Readers also often want to know how much the refund may be and why HMRC sometimes takes time to process it.
This article explains the basic rule, how the refund is calculated, and how the position differs from separate arguments about whether a property was uninhabitable at the time of purchase.
The Question
A buyer purchased a residential property for £335,000 and paid SDLT at the higher rates for additional dwellings. The buyer later sold the former main residence and wanted to know whether that sale within 3 years would allow a reclaim of the higher-rate element. The buyer also wanted an approximate figure for the refund and an update on HMRC processing times.
Nick’s Explanation
Nick’s explanation was that the reclaim figure was based on the difference between:
- the SDLT actually paid at the higher residential rates, and
- the SDLT that would have been due at the ordinary residential rates.
In the anonymised figures provided:
- purchase price: £335,000
- total SDLT paid: £21,000
- SDLT due at ordinary residential rates: £4,250
- refund claimed: £16,750 plus any statutory interest paid by HMRC
Nick also indicated that if HMRC delayed dealing with the reclaim, follow-up contact with HMRC might be needed because processing can be slow.
The Law
The higher rates of SDLT for additional dwellings are contained in Schedule 4ZA to the Finance Act 2003. Broadly, the surcharge applies when a purchaser buys a dwelling and, at the end of the effective date of the transaction, owns an interest in another dwelling, unless a relieving provision applies.
One important relieving provision concerns replacement of a purchaser’s only or main residence. In broad terms, if a buyer purchases a new main residence before disposing of the old one, the higher rates may still apply at the time of purchase. However, if the old main residence is then disposed of within the permitted period, the buyer can reclaim the higher-rate element.
The reclaim is not a fresh relief from ordinary SDLT. It is a repayment of the extra SDLT charged because the transaction was initially treated as an additional dwelling purchase.
The key legal issue is therefore whether the later sale was a disposal of the buyer’s previous only or main residence within the statutory time limit and whether the purchased dwelling was intended to replace that residence.
Analysis
The rules are usually applied in the following order.
First, identify what happened on the purchase date. If the buyer bought a new dwelling while still owning the previous home, the higher rates often applied automatically on completion.
Second, ask whether the new property was bought as a replacement for the buyer’s only or main residence. This is a factual question. The buyer must usually show that the former dwelling had been the only or main residence and that the new dwelling was acquired as its replacement.
Third, check whether the former main residence was sold within the permitted period. The common shorthand is that the old home must be sold within 3 years of the purchase of the new one. If that happens, a reclaim of the surcharge may be available.
Fourth, calculate the refund. The amount repayable is generally the difference between:
- the SDLT paid including the higher rates, and
- the SDLT that would have been payable without the higher rates.
Using the figures in this scenario:
- SDLT paid: £21,000
- ordinary residential SDLT: £4,250
- difference: £16,750
That means the reclaim sought was £16,750, with statutory interest potentially added by HMRC where applicable.
Fifth, keep the legal basis clear. A reclaim based on selling the former main residence within 3 years is different from arguing that the purchased property was not suitable for use as a dwelling. These are separate routes and should not be confused.
That distinction matters because the threshold for saying a property was not suitable for use as a dwelling is now relatively high following Amarjeet and Tajinder Mudan v The Commissioners for HMRC [2025] EWCA Civ 799. In uninhabitable or not suitable for use cases, the courts now take a stricter view, so many properties in poor condition will still be treated as dwellings for SDLT purposes. Where the facts support it, the replacement of only or main residence reclaim may therefore be the more straightforward route.
Outcome
If a buyer paid the 3% SDLT surcharge because they had not yet sold their previous main home, and that former home was then sold within 3 years, a reclaim of the surcharge is commonly available.
On the figures used here, the practical result was a refund claim of £16,750 plus any statutory interest, assuming the replacement main residence conditions were met.
Practical Steps
If you are assessing your own position, the main steps are:
- Check the completion date of the new purchase.
- Check the completion date of the sale of the former home.
- Confirm that the former home was genuinely your only or main residence.
- Confirm that the new property was bought as its replacement.
- Compare the SDLT actually paid with the SDLT due at ordinary residential rates.
- Gather supporting documents, such as completion statements and SDLT filing records.
- If HMRC has not processed the claim within a reasonable time, follow up directly.
If your case also involves an argument that the property was uninhabitable, that issue should be analysed separately and carefully in light of Amarjeet and Tajinder Mudan v The Commissioners for HMRC [2025] EWCA Civ 799, because the legal threshold is now demanding.
Conclusion
Yes, in the usual replacement-of-main-residence scenario, the 3% SDLT surcharge can often be reclaimed if the previous home is sold within 3 years. The refund is generally the difference between the higher-rate SDLT paid and the ordinary residential SDLT that should otherwise have applied.
Legal References Used
- Finance Act 2003
- Schedule 4ZA, Finance Act 2003
- Amarjeet and Tajinder Mudan v The Commissioners for HMRC [2025] EWCA Civ 799
This page was last updated on 22 March 2026.
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