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    Home»PROPERTY»What Costs Are Involved in Buying a Home Beyond the Purchase Price?

    What Costs Are Involved in Buying a Home Beyond the Purchase Price?

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    By EasyFinanceTips on 31 January 2026 PROPERTY
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    ⚡ Quick Answer

    Beyond the purchase price and deposit, UK buyers typically face: Stamp Duty Land Tax (£0 for most first-time buyers under £300,000, scaling to 12% for high-value properties), solicitor/conveyancing fees (£1,500-£3,000), a survey (£400-£1,500), mortgage arrangement fee (£0-£1,099), buildings insurance (required from exchange), and removal costs (£300-£2,000+). On a typical first-time purchase of £280,000, total additional costs usually run to £3,000-£7,000 on top of the deposit.

    The deposit is the headline number — but it's not all the upfront cash you need. Buyers regularly discover significant additional costs at various stages of the purchase process, and being unprepared for them can derail otherwise well-planned transactions. Here is every cost you're likely to encounter, explained properly.

    Table of Contents

    Toggle
    • 1. Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)
    • 2. Conveyancing/Solicitor Fees
    • 3. Survey
    • 4. Mortgage Costs
    • 5. Buildings Insurance
    • 6. Removal Costs and Post-Move Expenses
    • Frequently Asked Questions
      • Can I add any buying costs to my mortgage?
      • When exactly are these costs due?

    1. Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)

    For first-time buyers on properties under £300,000: £0. For properties £300,001-£500,000 as a first-time buyer: 5% on the portion above £300,000. For standard buyers: complex banded rates starting at 2% above £125,000. For second homes or buy-to-let: add 3% surcharge across all bands.

    On a £280,000 first-time purchase: £0. On a £380,000 first-time purchase: £4,000. On a £350,000 standard (non-first-time) purchase: £7,500.

    Our dedicated Stamp Duty guide has the full rate tables and worked examples.

    2. Conveyancing/Solicitor Fees

    Your solicitor handles the legal work: title searches, contract review, liaising with lender and seller's solicitor, fund transfers, SDLT return, Land Registry registration. Costs:

    • Standard freehold purchase: £1,200-£2,000 plus disbursements
    • Leasehold purchase: £1,500-£2,500 plus disbursements
    • Disbursements (searches, Land Registry, bank transfer fees): typically £400-£800 additional

    Total conveyancing: typically £1,600-£2,800 for a standard freehold purchase. Always get written quotes from at least three solicitors.

    3. Survey

    The mortgage lender's valuation protects the lender — it doesn't protect you. A separate survey is strongly recommended:

    • Homebuyer Report (RICS Level 2): £400-£800. Checks accessible parts of the property; flags concerns. Appropriate for most standard modern properties.
    • Building Survey (RICS Level 3 / Full Structural): £800-£1,500. More detailed; recommended for older properties, unusual construction, or visible concerns.

    Many buyers skip the survey to save money and later regret it. A £600 survey that identifies a £20,000 problem before exchange is excellent value.

    4. Mortgage Costs

    Mortgage arrangement fee: £0-£1,099 depending on the product. Lower-rate deals often carry fees; higher-rate deals are often fee-free. Calculate total cost (rate + fee) over the fixed period to compare properly — a fee-paying deal isn't always cheaper overall.

    Broker fee: £0-£500 for fee-charging brokers; many whole-of-market brokers are fee-free.

    5. Buildings Insurance

    Required by your mortgage lender from exchange of contracts (when the transaction becomes legally binding). Annual cost typically £150-£500 depending on property size, location, and rebuild value. Don't confuse with contents insurance (your possessions) — both are worth having but cover different things.

    6. Removal Costs and Post-Move Expenses

    Removal company (for a typical household): £500-£2,000 depending on distance and volume. New locks and security: £200-£400. Immediate redecoration: variable. Appliances if not included: variable. Budget a realistic contingency for initial post-purchase costs.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can I add any buying costs to my mortgage?

    Mortgage arrangement fees can sometimes be added to the loan (accruing interest over the mortgage term). SDLT and legal fees generally cannot be added to the mortgage — they must be paid in cash at completion.

    When exactly are these costs due?

    Solicitor fees: part on instruction, remainder at completion. SDLT: due within 14 days of completion. Insurance: must be in place from exchange. Survey: due when commissioned (before offer acceptance in some cases, or after in others).

    For an independent, comprehensive overview, MoneyHelper's buying a home costs guide is thorough and unbiased.

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    EasyFinanceTips is a UK personal finance blog covering budgeting, saving, debt, credit scores, mortgages, investing, side hustles, and more. We turn complicated money topics into simple, no-nonsense advice for everyday people. Honest, free, and written for real UK life.

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