Key Takeaway

The total cost of buying a house in the UK in 2026 ranges from £8,000 to £15,000+ on top of the purchase price. Key costs: stamp duty (£0-£12,500 for most buyers), solicitor fees (£1,000-£2,000), survey (£250-£1,500), mortgage fees (£0-£2,000), and moving costs (£300-£2,000).

How Much Does It Cost to Buy a House in the UK?

Learn about how much does it cost to buy a house in the uk?. Expert guidance for UK first-time buyers in 2026.

Introduction

One of the most important questions for anyone considering buying a property is: "How much will it actually cost?" Many first-time buyers focus solely on the mortgage payment and overlook the substantial additional costs involved in purchasing a property. The cost of buying a house in the UK extends far beyond your deposit and mortgage. Between professional fees, government taxes, and miscellaneous costs, you could spend 5–10% of the property price before you even receive the keys. This comprehensive guide breaks down every cost associated with buying a property in the UK, helping you budget accurately and avoid surprises.

The Deposit: Your Upfront Investment

Your deposit is typically the largest upfront cost and is calculated as a percentage of the property's purchase price.

Typical Deposit Amounts

Property Price 5% Deposit 10% Deposit 15% Deposit 20% Deposit
£150,000
£7,500 | £15,000 | £22,500 | £30,000 | | £200,000 | £10,000 | £20,000 | £30,000 | £40,000 | | £250,000 | £12,500 | £25,000 | £37,500 | £50,000 | | £300,000 | £15,000 | £30,000 | £45,000 | £60,000 | | £400,000 | £20,000 | £40,000 | £60,000 | £80,000 | The deposit you pay is held in escrow by your solicitor until completion, when it's credited towards your purchase price. If the purchase falls through before exchange of contracts, you should recover your deposit. After exchange, your deposit is at risk if you pull out.

Deposit Insurance (Mortgage Indemnity Insurance)

If you're borrowing more than 85% of the property's value (putting down less than 15%), your lender will require mortgage indemnity insurance (MII). This insurance protects the lender if you default on your mortgage. MII costs typically range from £500–2,500 depending on your loan-to-value ratio and property price. Surprisingly, you pay this cost, not the lender. It's non-refundable and offers you no protection—it purely protects the lender. #### MII Cost Examples

Property Price Loan Amount MII Cost
£150,000 @ 90% LTV
£135,000 | £400–700 | | £250,000 @ 90% LTV | £225,000 | £800–1,200 | | £250,000 @ 95% LTV | £237,500 | £1,500–2,000 |

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Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)

Stamp Duty Land Tax is a government tax on property purchases. In 2026, it's one of the largest costs in your purchase, and most first-time buyers are not exempt.

Stamp Duty Rates for 2026

There's often confusion about stamp duty because rates differ based on whether you're a first-time buyer, second-time buyer, or buy-to-let investor. First Time Buyers (England & Northern Ireland): First time buyers purchasing a property up to £425,000 pay zero stamp duty. This is a significant benefit, saving thousands on your purchase.

Purchase Price Stamp Duty (First Time Buyer)
Up to £425,000
£0 | | £425,001–£625,000 | 5% on amount over £425,000 | | Over £625,000 | Standard rates apply (see below) | Other Buyers (England & Northern Ireland):
Purchase Price Rate
Up to £250,000
0% | | £250,001–£925,000 | 5% | | £925,001–£1.5m | 10% | | Over £1.5m | 12% | Higher Rate for Additional Properties: Buying a second property or buy-to-let incurs an additional 5% surcharge on top of standard rates.

Stamp Duty Examples

First time buyer purchasing £300,000 property: £0 (all first-time buyer relief) Second-time buyer purchasing £300,000 property: £12,500 (5% on the full amount) First time buyer purchasing £450,000 property: £1,250 (5% on £25,000 over the threshold) Stamp duty calculator: Check the government's SDLT calculator for your exact amount. Note: Scotland and Wales have different systems (Land and Buildings Transaction Tax in Scotland, Land Transaction Tax in Wales) with their own rates and thresholds.

Solicitor and Conveyancing Fees

Your solicitor handles the legal aspects of your purchase: conducting searches, raising enquiries, reviewing contracts, and ensuring completion proceeds smoothly.

Typical Solicitor Costs

Solicitor fees for a standard house purchase typically range from £500–1,500. The exact amount depends on:

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UK House Buying Costs Breakdown (2026)

Cost ItemTypical RangeFirst-Time Buyer
Stamp Duty (SDLT)£0 - £12,500£0 (under £425k)
Solicitor/Conveyancer fees£1,000 - £2,000£1,000 - £2,000
Search fees (disbursements)£250 - £450£250 - £450
Property survey£250 - £1,500£250 - £1,500
Mortgage arrangement fee£0 - £2,000£0 - £2,000
Mortgage valuation£0 - £500£0 - £500
Buildings insurance£150 - £400/yr£150 - £400/yr
Removal costs£300 - £2,000£300 - £1,500
Land Registry fee£95 - £540£95 - £540
Total (estimate)£2,045 - £21,890£2,045 - £8,890

Based on average UK property price of £290,000. Sources: HMRC, Law Society, RICS

Key terms explained

Quick definitions of the key concepts covered in this guide. See our full property glossary

Disbursements
Third-party costs paid by your solicitor on your behalf during the conveyancing process, including search fees, Land Registry fees, and stamp duty.
Mortgage Arrangement Fee
A fee charged by the lender to set up your mortgage, typically £0-£2,000. Can sometimes be added to the loan balance.
Retention
Money held back by the lender after completion, usually because of property issues identified in the survey that need fixing.
Indemnity Insurance
A one-off insurance policy that protects against specific legal defects with the property, often cheaper than resolving the underlying issue.

Sources & References

All data sourced from official UK government and regulatory bodies. Last verified March 2026.

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