UK house prices slid in May following stamp duty tax hike, Halifax says
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on June 6, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026
Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®
Posted on June 6, 2025
2 min readLast updated: January 23, 2026
UK house prices dropped 0.4% in May due to a stamp duty tax hike. Halifax reports a stable market with future trends hinging on interest rates and income growth.
(Reuters) -British house prices fell by more than expected in May following an increase in property transaction taxes the prior month, leaving values broadly flat for the year so far, figures from mortgage lender Halifax showed on Friday.
Halifax said house prices fell by 0.4% in May after a 0.3% increase in April. A Reuters poll of economists had pointed to a fall of 0.1% for May.
House prices were 2.5% higher on the year - less than the 3.0% annual rise forecast in the poll.
Halifax said the housing market looked "broadly stable", with the average level of house prices hovering around 297,000 pounds ($402,500) since December.
"The market appears to have absorbed the temporary surge in activity over spring, which was driven by the changes to stamp duty," Amanda Bryden, Halifax's head of mortgages, said.
Separate data published last week from the tax office showed residential property transactions rocketed by 62% in March and then collapsed by a record 63% in April, as buyers raced to close deals in March ahead of the stamp duty tax increase.
"The outlook will depend on the pace of cuts to interest rates, as well as the strength of future income growth and broader inflation trends," Bryden said.
Financial markets on Thursday pointed to between one and two quarter-point interest rate cuts between now and the end of the year. A Reuters poll of economists published last month pointed to two such rate cuts.
($1 = 0.7378 pounds)
(Reporting by Andy Bruce; editing by William James)
House prices fell by 0.4% in May after a 0.3% increase in April.
House prices were 2.5% higher on the year, which was less than the 3.0% annual rise forecast.
The outlook will depend on the pace of cuts to interest rates, future income growth, and broader inflation trends.
Residential property transactions surged by 62% in March but then collapsed by a record 63% in April.
The average level of house prices has been hovering around 297,000 pounds ($402,500) since December.
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