Calculator

NSW Stamp Duty Calculator (2026)

Calculate NSW stamp duty, fees and total charges. Includes FHB concessions and foreign buyer surcharge.

Formula
Stamp Duty = Property Value × State Rate + Concessions - Surcharges
Estimate updates below
Stamp Duty$0.00
Step 1

Inputs

Select your state or territory for accurate rates

The purchase price or market value of the property

Select the type of property being purchased

Select your buyer type for applicable concessions

No

Check if you are a foreign buyer or temporary visa holder

Step 02 · Resultsinstant
Stamp Duty

$0.00

Transfer Fees

$0.00

Mortgage Registration

$0.00

Total Government Charges

$0.00

How NSW Transfer Duty Works in FY 2025-26

NSW transfer duty (commonly called stamp duty) is a state tax on the dutiable value of a property transfer. It is administered by Revenue NSW and calculated on a sliding scale of brackets, plus a series of surcharges and concessions that can swing the bill by tens of thousands of dollars.

The FY 2025-26 Bracket Structure

Duty is calculated cumulatively. You pay the lower-bracket rates on the portion of value within each bracket, then a higher rate on the excess. The current general schedule:

  • Up to $17,000: 1.25%
  • $17,001 – $37,000: $212 + 1.50% on excess
  • $37,001 – $99,000: $512 + 1.75% on excess
  • $99,001 – $372,000: $1,597 + 3.50% on excess
  • $372,001 – $1,240,000: $11,152 + 4.50% on excess
  • $1,240,001 – $3,721,000: $50,212 + 5.50% on excess
  • Above $3,721,000 (residential): premium rate of 7% on the excess

First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme (FHBAS)

NSW abolished the temporary "First Home Buyer Choice" scheme in mid-2024 and reverted to FHBAS as the primary concession. From 1 July 2023:

  • Full exemption for new or existing homes up to $800,000
  • Concessional duty on a linear taper between $800,000 and $1,000,000
  • No concession above $1,000,000

Vacant land has separate thresholds ($350k full / $450k taper). The taper is straightforward: at $900,000 the buyer pays roughly half the standard duty.

Foreign Purchaser Surcharge

Foreign persons (including most temporary residents) pay an additional 9% surcharge purchaser duty on residential property, applied on top of standard duty. The surcharge increased from 8% to 9% effective 1 January 2025. There is no FHBAS equivalent for foreign buyers — full surcharge applies from the first dollar.

Worked Example: $1,100,000 Sydney House, First Home Buyer

  • Purchase price: $1,100,000
  • Buyer status: Australian citizen, first home buyer, owner-occupier
  • Property type: existing dwelling

Standard duty: $11,152 + 4.50% × ($1,100,000 − $372,000) = $11,152 + $32,760 = $43,912.

FHBAS concession: because the price exceeds $1,000,000, no concession applies. The buyer pays the full $43,912.

If the same buyer negotiated to $999,000, FHBAS taper applies and the duty drops by ~$197. Drop further to $800,000 and duty falls to zero. That $200k of price difference unlocks ~$39,000 of concession plus the avoided LMI on the saved deposit — a powerful incentive to buy below the threshold even if it means a slightly smaller property.

Common Mistakes

  1. Confusing the dutiable value with the contract price. Duty is assessed on the higher of consideration paid or unencumbered market value. Off-market deals between related parties trigger a market-value reassessment.
  2. Missing the 3-month payment deadline. Duty is payable within three months of contract date (not settlement). Late payment attracts interest at the Revenue NSW general interest charge rate.
  3. Assuming FHBAS applies to investors. It does not. The buyer must move in within 12 months and live there for a continuous 12-month period.
  4. Forgetting the foreign-purchaser surcharge applies to part-foreign buyers. A property purchased jointly by an Australian citizen and a foreign-citizen partner attracts surcharge on the foreign owner's share — typically 50%.
  5. Including the surcharge in the FHBAS calculation. The surcharge is calculated on the full price regardless of any FHBAS concession on the standard duty component.
NSW Stamp Duty Calculator (2026)