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Government response to petition to extend Stamp Duty Holiday

I signed a petition about this and have just received the response, which is a no. Good luck to everyone who will meet the deadline.

Extend the Stamp Duty Holiday for an additional 6 months after 31st March 2021 - Petitions (parliament.uk)


£216 saved 24 October 2014
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Comments

  • Thrugelmir
    Thrugelmir Posts: 89,546 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 10,000 Posts Name Dropper Photogenic
    The holiday served it's purpose. Hopefully prices will subsequently fall back in response. 
  • Sibbers123
    Sibbers123 Posts: 324 Forumite
    Fourth Anniversary 100 Posts
    edited 12 December 2020 at 9:56AM
    Hard to justify politically to extend the SDLT holiday. Naga on BBC breakfast will be asking all sorts. 'You can afford to cut SDLT up to £15,000 but can't afford to feed hungry school children, have frozen public sector pay, excluded up to 3 million people from financial support' etc etc.

    The only benefit of an extension would be to get existing deals across the line. We have known since June it will expire on 31st March 2021 so everyone has been working towards that date. An extension will not have the impact the initial holiday had for this reason.

    Also, the fact we are in a bubble negates any stamp duty holiday anyway as you are paying more overall. The only benefit is that you can mortgage the purchase price, but you have to pay cash for SDLT and people don't have cash but are happy to borrow up to their ears!

    I won't be signing as it is just short-termism and kicking the can down the road.
  • Then they need to change the terms as many people in Conveyancing currently will be unable to complete by the deadline due to a backlog. Change it so that those who are in Conveyancing by for example 31December qualify for the Stamp Duty "holiday"





  • I'm not hopeful I'll meet the deadline now and will have to readjust my budget.  I found out last Thursday, seven weeks in, that my vendor's solicitor had been unable to take any action due to Covid.  I was asked to offer over the asking price to secure my purchase and offered what would have been the stamp duty.  
    £216 saved 24 October 2014
  • I'm not hopeful I'll meet the deadline now and will have to readjust my budget.  I found out last Thursday, seven weeks in, that my vendor's solicitor had been unable to take any action due to Covid.  I was asked to offer over the asking price to secure my purchase and offered what would have been the stamp duty.  
    Well if it’s now overpriced because of the vendors tine delay you’ll have to renegotiate 
  • FTB_Help
    FTB_Help Posts: 336 Forumite
    100 Posts First Anniversary Name Dropper
    I'm not hopeful I'll meet the deadline now and will have to readjust my budget.  I found out last Thursday, seven weeks in, that my vendor's solicitor had been unable to take any action due to Covid.  I was asked to offer over the asking price to secure my purchase and offered what would have been the stamp duty.  

    Why did your vendor ask you to increase after an accepted offer if you don't mind me asking?
    I too am now having to rearrange and budget for potentially not meeting the deadline, my searches are due back just after Xmas, survey done but remaining pessimistic on the rest of the conveyancing work as most offices will be closed from end of next week and probably not back up until next yr 😪
  • blue_max_3
    blue_max_3 Posts: 1,194 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper Combo Breaker
    I'm buying now and factored in the fact that it would be an additional £15k after 31st March. If it was to be extended, I'd feel mislead, as it formed part of my purchasing decision. 
    I rather wish they had not introduced it at all. It just pushed prices up as far as I can see.
  • FTB_Help I saw the property first, on Saturday 17 October, and went to my car and phoned through to the EA to offer full asking price.  I had told the vendor I would be offering, but she said as it was her first day on the market she would like to allow the other viewings booked in over the weekend.  On the Monday, it seemed that the people after me on Saturday also offered full asking price, and the Sunday viewer offered under.  The EA rang me on the Monday and told me the vendor said if I offered over the asking she'd agree to sell to me - I'm saving £2,500 if I get the stamp duty off, so I offered that.  In hindsight, I should have asked more questions - if neither of them were proceedable perhaps I'd have 'won' the purchase through being a cash buyer.  Unfortunately it's eight weeks today and nothing has happened, the elation soon fades doesn't it.

     
    £216 saved 24 October 2014
  • Neil49
    Neil49 Posts: 3,400 Forumite
    Part of the Furniture 1,000 Posts Name Dropper
    I'm not hopeful I'll meet the deadline now and will have to readjust my budget.  I found out last Thursday, seven weeks in, that my vendor's solicitor had been unable to take any action due to Covid.  I was asked to offer over the asking price to secure my purchase and offered what would have been the stamp duty.  
    Well if it’s now overpriced because of the vendors tine delay you’ll have to renegotiate 
    Just to point out to the OP that you aren't committed to buy until you exchange contracts. If you think that the delays will take you into April (and result in you paying stamp duty) then either renegotiate the price or start looking for alternative properties. 
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