British BulletinBritish Bulletin
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
What's On

Keir Starmer slammed over handling of Mandelson files with ‘documents withheld’

16 May 2026

Venezuela Fury, 16, flaunts extravagant gifts as teenager gears up for lavish ‘gypsy-esque’ wedding weekend

16 May 2026

US PGA Championship 2026: McIlroy and Scheffler in contention as McNealy and Smalley lead

16 May 2026

Karl Robinson: Salford City boss says League Two play-off final ‘biggest occasion’ for club | Manchester News

16 May 2026

Hero off-duty British policeman saves US cop’s life from rampaging gunman while on holiday

16 May 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Web Stories
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
British Bulletin
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Tech & Science
  • Travel
  • Spotlight
  • More
    • Press Release
British BulletinBritish Bulletin
Home » More than 110 council homes worth over £2million will NOT have to pay mansion tax under Rachel Reeves’s plan
Business

More than 110 council homes worth over £2million will NOT have to pay mansion tax under Rachel Reeves’s plan

By britishbulletin.com1 December 20254 Mins Read
More than 110 council homes worth over £2million will NOT have to pay mansion tax under Rachel Reeves’s plan
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Renters living in taxpayer-subsidised London social housing properties worth millions will be spared Rachel Reeves’s so-called “mansion tax”.

The Chancellor confirmed in the Budget last week that privately owned properties valued above £2million will face an average charge of £4,500 a year from April 2028.

However, those living in social housing will be exempt from the levy, according to government documents published on Wednesday, which state: “Social housing will not be in scope.”

A Treasury source later reiterated that residents of high-value social homes will not be required to pay the extra charge.

Across England there were more than 110 social housing homes worth more than £2million, which could therefore attract the mansion tax, a Telegraph analysis of property sales data and EPC ratings found.

The analysis revealed that the City of London and Westminster constituency contains the highest concentration of these valuable social homes, with 23 properties identified above the £2million mark.

Hampstead and Highgate follows with 15 such properties, whilst the vast majority of these high-value council homes are concentrated within London boundaries.

Only two social housing properties outside London are valued above the mansion tax threshold, with both located in Surrey and Buckinghamshire, according to Land Registry data.

The figures underline how London’s property boom has pushed even council-owned homes into million-pound price brackets, creating a sharp contrast between social housing tenants who will avoid the charge and private homeowners who will have to pay it.

The mansion tax will work as a council tax surcharge, with the money going to central government rather than local councils.

Property owners will pay between £2,500 a year for homes worth £2million to £2.5million, rising to £7,500 a year for properties valued above £5million.

The mansion tax has been labelled as inconsistent | GETTY

The bill will increase each year with inflation, and properties in council tax bands F to H will be revalued before the tax begins.

Although the levy falls on property owners rather than the people living in the homes, the exemption for social housing creates a two-tier system where identical properties are taxed differently depending on who owns them.

The policy forms part of broader Budget measures that will push the tax burden to post-war highs, raising £400 million for the Treasury.

Conservative shadow housing minister James Cleverly condemned the exemption as “an attack on aspiration and on people who have worked hard and saved hard, who will now have to pay for those who don’t work at all.”

LATEST DEVELOPMENTS:

Rachel Reeves delivered the budget on November 26

| GB NEWS

He argued that the policy allows “people living in expensive properties on the taxpayer’s dime” to “dodge the new charge” whilst ordinary families bear the burden.

Mr Cleverly highlighted that Labour had abandoned Conservative proposals for income testing in social housing and plans to sell high-value council properties to fund new social homes.

“And now Labour are taxing hard-working people to pay for homes they describe as mansions,” he added, pointing to the contradiction in the government’s approach to property taxation.

The English Housing Survey reveals that over 128,000 social housing tenants, representing 3.2 per cent of renters from local authorities and housing associations, earned above £71,344 last year.

Average social rents in London stand at £151 weekly, approximately £600 monthly, compared to private rental averages of £2,265 according to ONS data

|

GETTY

Average social rents in London stand at £151 weekly, approximately £600 monthly, compared to private rental averages of £2,265 according to ONS data.

Westminster council recently reinstated lifetime tenancies for all tenants following a 12-month introductory period, with 78 per cent of new council lettings offering accommodation for life.

John O’Connell, chief executive of the Taxpayers’ Alliance, argued that “nobody should be socially housed in a property worth more than £2million,” noting that “millions of families working extremely hard to cover the mortgage and rent of properties at a fraction of that cost.”

He criticised the Chancellor for “providing these residents with a get-out clause from her nasty mansion tax policy.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Keep Reading

State pension warning as millions to be hit with income tax bills despite Labour pledge

UK high street could lose up to 60 Post Office branches in major restructuring

Revolut launches current account with £9,000 worth of rewards including airport lounges and subscriptions

Universal Credit, PIP and Pension Credit among payments under fraud review

Civil servants collecting pensions above £150,000 for first time as taxpayer bill hits £7billion

Pension warning issued as half a million savers empty retirement funds

Households earning £60,000 could be missing out on an extra £35,562 as wealth gap grows

Retirees pension savings tax withdrawal

Clothing manufacturer North East Rig Out falls into liquidation after 40 years

Editors Picks

Venezuela Fury, 16, flaunts extravagant gifts as teenager gears up for lavish ‘gypsy-esque’ wedding weekend

16 May 2026

US PGA Championship 2026: McIlroy and Scheffler in contention as McNealy and Smalley lead

16 May 2026

Karl Robinson: Salford City boss says League Two play-off final ‘biggest occasion’ for club | Manchester News

16 May 2026

Hero off-duty British policeman saves US cop’s life from rampaging gunman while on holiday

16 May 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest Brittan News and Updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News

Donald Trump admits Keir Starmer is in ‘trouble’ and brands PM ‘weak’ amid Labour leadership crisis

16 May 2026

Gogglebox star dies at 77 following short illness as Channel 4 confirms news

16 May 2026

Parents hit by Child Maintenance Service errors | UK News

16 May 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
© 2026 British Bulletin. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.