Capital Gains Tax UK: Property, Shares, Reliefs and Annual Exemptions

Capital Gains Tax on Property UK 2026 — Second Homes & Buy-to-Let

How capital gains tax works on UK property sales. CGT on second homes, buy-to-let, inherited property, and land. Calculate your bill and learn how to reduce it legally.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

Selling a property other than your main home usually means paying Capital Gains Tax. Here’s how it works and how to minimize your bill.

For the wider PocketWise overview of CGT rates, property rules, calculators and reliefs, use the main Capital Gains Tax hub.

CGT Rates on Property 2026-27

Taxpayer StatusCGT Rate
Basic rate (income up to £37,700)18%
Higher rate (income above £37,700)24%
Additional rate24%

These are the same rates that applied to property before October 2024 — other assets have now been aligned to these higher rates.

When CGT Applies to Property

Taxable Property

Property TypeCGT Applies?
Second homeYes
Buy-to-letYes
Holiday homeYes
Inherited property (not your home)Yes
LandYes
Overseas propertyYes (UK residents)

Exempt Property

Property TypeCGT Status
Main residenceExempt (PRR)
Property in ISA (REITs)Exempt
Property passing on deathExempt (IHT may apply)

Calculating CGT on Property

Step-by-Step

StepCalculation
1Sale price
2Minus purchase price
3Minus buying costs
4Minus selling costs
5Minus improvement costs
6= Gross gain
7Minus losses
8Minus annual allowance (£3,000)
9= Taxable gain
10Apply CGT rate

Allowable Costs

Deductible (Buying)Amount
Stamp dutyFull amount
Solicitor feesFull amount
Survey feesFull amount
Estate agent (if you paid)Full amount
Deductible (Selling)Amount
Estate agent feesFull amount
Solicitor feesFull amount
Marketing costsFull amount
EPC certificateFull amount
Deductible (During Ownership)Amount
ExtensionFull amount
Loft conversionFull amount
New kitchen/bathroomFull amount
Central heating installationFull amount
Structural repairsFull amount
NOT DeductibleNotes
Mortgage interestNot capital expenditure
Regular maintenanceRepairs, not improvements
FurnitureUnless sold with property
Your timeNo deduction

Worked Examples

Example 1: Buy-to-Let Sale

ItemAmount
Purchase (2015)
Price£200,000
Stamp duty£7,500
Legal/survey fees£2,000
Total cost base£209,500
Improvements (2018)
Extension£30,000
New bathroom£8,000
Total improvements£38,000
Sale (2026)
Price£350,000
Estate agent (1.5%)£5,250
Legal fees£1,500
Net proceeds£343,250
CGT Calculation
Net proceeds£343,250
Minus cost base£209,500
Minus improvements£38,000
Gross gain£95,750
Minus annual allowance£3,000
Taxable gain£92,750
CGT at 24% (higher rate)£22,260

Example 2: Second Home — Basic Rate Taxpayer

ItemAmount
Sale proceeds (net of costs)£180,000
Purchase cost (including costs)£120,000
Improvements£15,000
Gross gain£45,000
Annual allowance£3,000
Taxable gain£42,000
Income: £35,000
Basic rate band remaining£2,700
Gain at 18%£486
Gain at 24%£9,432
Total CGT£9,918

Private Residence Relief (PRR)

Full Relief Conditions

ConditionRequirement
OccupationLived in as your home
Throughout ownershipFrom purchase to sale
Only/main homeOne home at a time
GroundsUnder 5,000 sqm (1.24 acres)

Partial Relief — Period of Occupation

If you didn’t live there throughout:

PeriodTreatment
Lived inFull relief
Last 9 monthsFull relief (even if not living there)
Away for employment anywhere (up to 4 years)Full relief
Away for UK employmentFull relief (unlimited)
Absent other reasonsNo relief

PRR Calculation Formula

Relief = Total Gain × (Qualifying Months ÷ Total Months Owned)

Example: Partial PRR

DetailPeriod
Owned10 years (120 months)
Lived in6 years (72 months)
Let out4 years (48 months)
Last 9 monthsQualify regardless
CalculationAmount
Total gain£100,000
Qualifying period72 + 9 = 81 months
PRR relief£100,000 × (81 ÷ 120) = £67,500
Taxable gain£32,500
Annual allowance£3,000
Final taxable£29,500

Lettings Relief

When It Applies

ConditionRequirement
PeriodLet out as residential accommodation
PRR periodAlso lived there at some point
Maximum£40,000

Lettings Relief Calculation

The relief is the lowest of:

  • PRR amount for letting period
  • £40,000
  • Gain from letting period

Example: Lettings Relief

DetailAmount
Total gain£100,000
Let period gain£40,000
PRR on let period£0
Lettings Relief availableLower of £40,000/£40,000/£0
Lettings Relief£0

Important: Lettings Relief is now limited — it only really helps if you shared the property with tenants.

Inherited Property

Base Cost for Inherited Property

ScenarioBase Cost
Inherited propertyMarket value at death
Probate valuationUsually accepted
Sale soon after deathLittle/no CGT
Hold and sell laterCGT on gain since death

Example: Inherited and Sold

ItemAmount
Inherited value (probate)£250,000
Sale price (3 years later)£300,000
Selling costs£6,000
Gain£44,000
Annual allowance£3,000
Taxable£41,000
CGT at 24%£9,840

If You Move Into Inherited Property

ActionCGT Result
Move in as main homeFuture gain exempt (PRR)
Sell immediatelyCGT on gain since death
Let then sellCGT on let period

Joint Ownership

Married Couples/Civil Partners

RuleDetail
Each has £3,000 allowanceCombined £6,000
Transfer between spousesNo CGT triggered
Joint ownershipEach taxed on their share
Main homeOnly one PRR between you

Example: Couple Selling Buy-to-Let

DetailAmount
Owned 50/50
Total gain£80,000
Each person’s gain£40,000
Each person’s allowance£3,000
Each person’s taxable£37,000
Total taxable£74,000

Non-Married Joint Owners

SituationTax Treatment
Unequal sharesTaxed on actual share
No allowance transferEach has own £3,000
Sale to each otherCGT at market value

60-Day Reporting Rule

Who Must Report

SituationMust Report?
UK residential property with gainYes
UK residential property with lossRequired (to claim loss)
Main home (full PRR)No
Non-residential propertyNo (use Self Assessment)

How to Report

StepAction
1Create Government Gateway account
2Access UK Property Account
3Enter property and transaction details
4Calculate gain (HMRC helps with calculator)
5Pay tax owed
6Keep confirmation

Deadlines

EventDeadline
Completion dateDay 0
Report and payDay 60
Late reportPenalties start

Penalties for Late Reporting

How LatePenalty
Up to 6 months£100
6-12 months£300 or 5% of tax
12+ months£300 or 5% of tax
InterestFrom day 61

Reducing CGT on Property

Strategy 1: Use Both Allowances (Couples)

BeforeAfter
Property in one nameTransfer 50% to spouse
One £3,000 allowanceTwo £3,000 allowances
SavingUp to £720 (24% of £3,000)

Strategy 2: Time the Sale

TimingBenefit
Early in tax yearUse this year’s allowance
If gain is hugeSplit over two tax years

Strategy 3: Maximize Deductible Costs

ReviewCheck
Purchase costsStamp duty, legal, survey
ImprovementsExtensions, kitchens, structural
Sale costsAll agent and legal fees

Strategy 4: Use Losses

ActionEffect
Sell loss-making assetCreates loss
Offset against property gainReduces tax
Carry forward unusedFor future years

Strategy 5: Pension Contributions

ActionEffect
Make pension contributionExtends basic rate band
More gain taxed at 18%Instead of 24%

Capital Gains Tax Reliefs for Property

Working Away

ReliefRequirement
4-year employment absenceFull PRR
UK employmentUnlimited absence with PRR
Job location/requirementMust be employment-related

Transferring Main Home Status

ScenarioAction
Own two propertiesNominate which is main home
Deadline2 years from acquiring second
Can be retrospectiveWithin 2 years

Marriage/Separation

SituationTreatment
Transfer on separationNo CGT (within certain period)
Divorce settlementMay have CGT implications
Get professional adviceComplex area

Common Property CGT Questions

What If Property Prices Fall?

ScenarioTreatment
Sell at a lossNo CGT
Report the lossWithin 4 years
Carry forwardOffset against future gains

CGT on Overseas Property

RuleApplication
UK residentPays UK CGT on worldwide gains
Foreign tax paidMay claim relief
Exchange rate gainsTaxable

Gifting Property

Gift ToCGT Treatment
SpouseNo CGT
ChildCGT on market value
CharityNo CGT
Below market valueCGT on market value

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Capital Gains Tax on Property
  2. GOV.UK — Private Residence Relief