🇦🇺 2025–26 Australia Stamp Duty Calculator: All 8 States & Territories

Instantly calculate transfer duty across all 8 states and territories. Factors in Principal Place of Residence (PPOR) rates, First Home Owner Grants (FHOG), investment property formulas, and foreign buyer surcharges.

🏛️ All 8 States & Territories 🔑 First Home Buyer Concessions 🏢 PPOR vs. Investment 🌐 FIRB Surcharges 📄 Printable PDF Report
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Buyer & Property Details
ⓘ Rates are 2025–26 estimates. Verify with your state revenue office or conveyancer. Rates change annually.
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Select your state, buyer structure, and property details to calculate stamp duty with FHOG grants, concessions, and trust/SMSF surcharge analysis automatically applied.

NSW First Home Buyer Choice — Stamp Duty vs. Annual Property Tax
Since January 2023, eligible first home buyers purchasing NSW properties up to $1.5M can opt in to an annual property tax instead of paying stamp duty upfront. This calculator shows the break-even year — and whether you should opt in based on your expected hold period.
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NSW Property Tax Break-Even
ⓘ Eligibility for NSW First Home Buyer Choice requires: Australian citizen or PR, property ≤ $1.5M, first home buyer, property must be primary residence. Verify eligibility at revenue.nsw.gov.au.
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The only free calculator that shows the NSW stamp duty vs. annual property tax break-even — with land value growth compounding and a hold-period recommendation.

Foreign Buyers Face TWO Layers of Extra Cost: A one-time stamp duty surcharge at purchase, PLUS an annual surcharge land tax every year you hold the property. For a $1M NSW property, that’s $80,000 in surcharge duty + $40,000/year in surcharge land tax — $280,000 over 5 years above the standard costs. No other calculator shows you the true 5-year total.
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Foreign Buyer Cost Analysis
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Select your state and property details to see the complete 5-year cost of foreign ownership — the only calculator that stacks stamp duty surcharge + annual land tax surcharge into a single total.

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Commercial & Off-the-Plan Duty
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House & Land Split Strategy
Stamp Duty Saving: Buying land + separate construction contract means stamp duty is paid only on the land price — not the build. Model the saving below.
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Select your transaction type to calculate stamp duty for commercial property, off-the-plan purchases with concession savings, or landholder duty on company/trust share transfers.

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Full Settlement Cost Stack
Every dollar you need to save before settlement — itemized. This dashboard computes every upfront cost from stamp duty to conveyancing so you know your total cash requirement.
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Enter your purchase details to generate a complete, itemized settlement cost stack — every dollar you need to have saved before settlement day.

Complete Guide

How to Use This Australia Stamp Duty Calculator: Step-by-Step

This is the most comprehensive free stamp duty tool available for the Australian market. It instantly calculates exact state revenue office formulas, concessions, and foreign surcharges based on your specific property intentions.

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8 States
SRO Formulas
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PPOR
Concessions Applied
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FIRB
Surcharges Included
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100%
Free — No Sign-Up
Step-by-Step: How to Use This Tool
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Step 1: Enter the Property Purchase Price (Dutiable Value)

Start by entering the exact contract purchase price or the current market value (whichever is higher). Stamp duty is calculated on a progressive bracket system based on this final dutiable value.

Tip: Always use the contract price unless you are transferring property between related parties (family members), which legally requires an independent market valuation.
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Step 2: Select Your State or Territory (NSW, VIC, QLD, etc.)

Every Australian state and territory has its own distinct tax brackets, concession thresholds, and surcharge rates. Selecting your specific location instantly applies the correct 2025–26 State Revenue Office formula.

Tip: Stamp duty is always paid to the state or territory where the physical property is located, regardless of where you currently live.
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Step 3: Select Property Intention (PPOR vs. Investment Property)

Choose whether you intend to live in the property as your Principal Place of Residence (PPOR) or rent it out. Many states (like QLD and WA) offer significantly lower baseline duty rates for owner-occupiers compared to investors.

Tip: To qualify for the reduced PPOR rate, most states require you to move into the property within 12 months of settlement and live there continuously for at least 6 months.
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Step 4: Claim First Home Buyer (FHB) Concessions & FHOG

If you or your spouse have never owned residential property in Australia, check the First Home Buyer box. The calculator will automatically apply your state’s FHB duty exemptions, sliding scale concessions, and the First Home Owner Grant (FHOG) if applicable.

Tip: In almost all states, buying a brand-new home or vacant land unlocks much higher FHOG cash payouts than buying an established property.
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Step 5: Apply Foreign Purchaser Additional Duty (FPAD / FIRB Surcharges)

If you are not an Australian citizen or permanent resident, you must declare it. The calculator will instantly add the mandatory foreign buyer surcharge to your bill, which ranges from 4% to 8% depending on the jurisdiction.

Tip: Even if you are an Australian citizen, buying through certain Discretionary Trusts or SMSFs can accidentally trigger this massive surcharge if your trust deed does not specifically exclude foreign beneficiaries.
Complete Guide 2025–26

What Is Stamp Duty & How Is It Calculated in Australia?

Stamp duty — officially called Transfer Duty in most states — is a state government tax on the purchase of property. Every state sets its own rates, thresholds, and concessions. Here is everything you need to know before you buy.

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8
States & Territories
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$0
FHB duty floor — ACT (under $1M)
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8%
Foreign buyer surcharge — NSW & VIC
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$30K
QLD First Home Owner Grant (new homes)
What Is Stamp Duty (Transfer Duty)?
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Transfer Duty Basics: What Are You Actually Paying For?

State government tax
Stamp duty is collected by each state and territory, not the federal government. This means rates, thresholds, and concessions differ significantly depending on where you buy — a $750,000 property in QLD, NSW, and VIC can attract three completely different duty bills.
Based on purchase price
Duty is calculated on the greater of purchase price or market value. You cannot reduce duty by artificially undervaluing the property — revenue offices assess and can challenge declared values.
Who pays
The buyer always pays stamp duty, not the seller. It is due at settlement and must be funded from your own savings — it cannot be included in your mortgage in most cases.
Buyer cost
When it is paid
Due at or before settlement — typically within 30 days of signing contracts in most states. In VIC and NSW, it must be paid before the title transfer is registered.
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The Progressive Bracket Formula: How Dutiable Value is Taxed

Progressive brackets
Like income tax, stamp duty uses progressive brackets. Each portion of the purchase price is taxed at the rate for that bracket only — not the whole price at the top rate. This is why the calculator shows a bracket-by-bracket breakdown.
Step-by-step example
NSW — $850,000 purchase price:
$0–$17K: $0–$17K × 1.25% = $212
$17K–$36K: × 1.50% = $285
$36K–$97K: × 1.75% = $1,068
$97K–$364K: × 3.50% = $9,345
$364K–$850K: × 4.50% = $21,870
Total: $32,780
Bracket method
Effective vs. marginal rate
The effective rate is total duty ÷ price. On $850K in NSW that is 3.86% — much lower than the top marginal bracket rate of 5.5%. Always look at effective rate, not the bracket rate you land in.
The Formula — How Every Dollar Is Taxed

Progressive Bracket Formula (used for all 8 states)

Duty = Σ [ MIN(price, bracket_max) − bracket_min ] × bracket_rate + bracket_base

Each bracket contributes only the tax on the dollars that fall within it. The calculator iterates through every bracket from lowest to highest, stopping when the purchase price is reached. The sum of all bracket contributions = your total duty.

NT Special Formula (below $525,000): NT uses a special formula: (0.06571441 × V² + 15V − 12,000) ÷ 1,000 where V = price ÷ 1,000. This produces a smooth curve rather than discrete brackets. The minimum duty is $20.

VIC Premium Duty (>$3M): Properties above $3M in VIC attract an additional 6.5% on the portion exceeding $3M, stacked on top of standard progressive duty.

All 8 States & Territories — 2025–26 Rates & FHB Concessions
🔵 New South WalesNSW
Top Rate
7.0% on amount over $3,040,000 (premium duty)
Mid Rate
4.5% on $364K–$1.016M | 5.5% on $1.016M–$3.04M
FHB Exempt
Full exemption under $800K | Partial concession $800K–$1M
FHOG
$10,000 for new/off-the-plan homes only
Foreign
+8% surcharge duty + 4% annual land tax surcharge
Special
NSW First Home Buyer Choice: opt for annual property tax instead of upfront duty (see Tab 2)
Best FHB concession ≤$800K
🔵 VictoriaVIC
Top Rate
5.5% on amount over $960,000 + 6.5% premium >$3M
Mid Rate
5.0% on $130K–$440K | 6.0% on $440K–$960K
FHB Exempt
Full exemption under $600K | Partial concession $600K–$750K
FHOG
$10,000 for new homes only
Foreign
+8% surcharge duty + 2% annual land tax surcharge
Note
Premium duty on luxury properties over $3M adds 6.5% on the excess
Moderate FHB threshold
🔴 QueenslandQLD
Top Rate
5.75% on amount over $1,000,000
Mid Rate
3.5% on $75K–$540K | 4.5% on $540K–$1M
FHB Exempt
Full concession under $700K | Partial $700K–$800K
FHOG
$30,000 — highest in Australia for new homes
Foreign
+7% surcharge duty + 3% absentee owner land tax
Note
First $5,000 of property value attracts 0% duty — unique to QLD
Best FHOG — $30,000
⚫ Western AustraliaWA
Top Rate
5.15% on amount over $725,000
Mid Rate
1.90% on $0–$120K | 2.75% on $150K–$360K | 3.0% on $360K–$725K
FHB Exempt
Full exemption under $430K | Partial $430K–$530K
FHOG
$10,000 for new homes only
Foreign
+7% surcharge duty + 0.75% annual land tax surcharge
Low FHB threshold ($430K)
🟡 South AustraliaSA
Top Rate
5.5% on amount over $500,000
Mid Rate
3.5% on $50K–$100K | 4.0% on $100K–$200K | 5.0% on $300K–$500K
FHB Exempt
No SD concession — FHOG only, no stamp duty reduction
FHOG
$15,000 for new homes — no stamp duty discount in SA
Foreign
+7% surcharge duty + 0.5% annual land tax surcharge
No FHB stamp duty concession
🟢 TasmaniaTAS
Top Rate
4.5% on amount over $725,000
Min Duty
$50 minimum duty applies on all transactions
FHB Exempt
Full exemption under $500K | Partial $500K–$600K
FHOG
$10,000 for new homes only
Foreign
No surcharge — TAS does not impose foreign buyer surcharges
No foreign surcharges
🔵 ACTACT
Top Rate
6.0% on amount over $1,455,000
Mid Rate
1.0% on $0–$260K | 3.6% on $300K–$500K | 4.9% on $500K–$750K
FHB Exempt
Stamp duty abolished for FHB under $1M via Home Buyer Concession Scheme
FHOG
No FHOG in ACT — duty abolition is the concession
Foreign
No separate foreign surcharge — standard progressive rates apply
Best for FHB under $1M
🟠 Northern TerritoryNT
Special
Formula-based below $525K: (0.06571441V² + 15V − 12,000) ÷ 1,000 where V = price ÷ 1,000
Above $525K
4.95% on $525K–$3M | 5.5% on $3M–$5M | 5.89% above $5M
FHB Exempt
Full concession under $650K | Partial $650K–$800K
FHOG
$10,000 for new homes
Foreign
No surcharge — NT does not impose foreign buyer surcharges
Unique formula-based calculation
📊 State ComparisonSummary
Highest FHB
ACT — full duty abolished under $1M
Highest FHOG
QLD — $30,000 for new homes
Highest Foreign
NSW & VIC — 8% surcharge duty + annual land tax surcharge
No Surcharge
TAS, NT, ACT — no foreign buyer surcharges
Cheapest Rates
WA — lowest effective rate on most mid-range properties
Use calculator to compare instantly
NSW Annual Property Tax — The Break-Even Decision
NSW First Home Buyer Choice (since January 2023) — Eligible first home buyers purchasing NSW properties up to $1.5M can choose between paying stamp duty upfront OR opting into an annual property tax. This is a permanent, irrevocable choice — get it right before settlement.
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Annual Property Tax — How It Works

Owner-occupier rate
$400 + 0.3% of unimproved land value per year. On a property with a $200,000 land value: Year 1 tax = $400 + ($200,000 × 0.003) = $1,000/year. This grows as land value grows.
Owner-occupier
Investor rate
$1,500 + 1.1% of unimproved land value per year. Investors pay significantly more — on a $300K land value that is $1,500 + $3,300 = $4,800/year from Day 1, growing annually with land.
Investor rate is much higher
Break-even logic
Cumulative annual taxes grow each year as land value grows. The break-even year is when total cumulative annual taxes first exceed the one-off stamp duty. If you sell before break-even, annual tax wins. After break-even, stamp duty was cheaper.
When to choose annual tax
If your expected hold period is less than the break-even year, opt in to annual tax — you pay less in total. For most owner-occupiers on sub-$1M properties with 3% land growth, break-even is typically 10–14 years.
Rule of thumb: hold < 10 yrs → opt in
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Worked Example — $850K Property, $200K Land Value

YearLand Value (3% growth)Annual TaxCumulative Taxvs. Stamp Duty
1$200,000$1,000$1,000$31,780 cheaper
3$212,360$1,037$3,111$29,669 cheaper
5$231,855$1,096$5,282$27,498 cheaper
10$268,783$1,206$11,267$21,513 cheaper
15$311,801$1,336$19,067$13,713 cheaper
~13$292,774$1,278≈$32,780⚡ Break-even
20$361,222$1,484$28,522$4,258 more expensive

Based on NSW $850K purchase, $200K land value, owner-occupier rate ($400 + 0.3%/yr), 3% annual land growth. Stamp duty = $32,780.

Foreign Buyer Costs — Two Layers of Surcharge
FIRB Approval Required First — All foreign persons must obtain Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) approval before purchasing residential property in Australia. Fees start at $14,500 for properties under $1M. Non-compliance penalties can reach $222,000 or 25% of the purchase price.
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Layer 1 — Surcharge Duty (One-Time)

Paid at purchase on top of standard transfer duty. NSW & VIC: 8%. QLD, SA, WA: 7%. TAS, NT, ACT: 0%. On a $1M NSW property this is an extra $80,000 on top of normal stamp duty.

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Layer 2 — Annual Land Tax Surcharge

Charged every year you hold the property on the unimproved land value. NSW: 4%/yr. VIC: 2%/yr. QLD: 3%/yr. On a $300K NSW land value that is $12,000/yr — $60,000 over 5 years on top of the surcharge duty.

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5-Year Total — NSW $1M Purchase, $300K Land

Standard duty: ~$40,490 | Surcharge duty (+8%): $80,000 | Annual land tax surcharge ($300K × 4% × 5 yrs): $60,000 | Total foreign ownership cost over 5 years: ~$180,490. Compare to ~$40,490 for an Australian resident.

StateSurcharge DutyAnnual Land Tax Surcharge5-Year Stack on $1M ($300K Land)FIRB Required
NSW+8.0%4.0%/yr~$180,490Yes
VIC+8.0%2.0%/yr~$157,360Yes
QLD+7.0%3.0%/yr~$162,025Yes
SA+7.0%0.5%/yr~$116,705Yes
WA+7.0%0.75%/yr~$120,955Yes
TAS0%NoneStandard duty onlyYes
ACT0%NoneStandard rates applyYes
NT0%NoneStandard duty onlyYes
SMSF & Trust Surcharge — The Hidden Trap
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When SMSF & Trusts Attract the Foreign Surcharge

SMSF trigger
An SMSF is deemed a foreign person if any member holds 20%+ beneficial interest AND is a foreign person. Even one foreign member with a ≥20% interest in the fund triggers the full surcharge duty on the entire purchase.
Critical SMSF check
Trust trigger
A discretionary or unit trust is deemed a foreign trust if it has any foreign beneficiaries — including potential beneficiaries. A broad beneficiary class (e.g., “any family member”) could include overseas relatives and trigger surcharge duty unexpectedly.
Check beneficiary class carefully
Impact
In NSW, SMSF or trust surcharge duty is 8% of purchase price — identical to the foreign individual rate. On an $850K SMSF purchase this adds $68,000 in duty that many buyers don’t anticipate.
Advice
Always review the trust deed and SMSF membership before contract signing. Revenue offices assess trust deeds — a poorly drafted deed can result in surcharge duty even when no foreign member is intended.
Seek specialist advice
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Off-the-Plan (OTP) Concession — How It Works

The concession
For off-the-plan purchases, duty is calculated on the dutiable value — not the full contract price. Dutiable value = contract price × (1 − construction completion % at contract date).
Duty on land value only at signing
Example
$700K apartment, 40% construction complete at contract. Dutiable value = $700K × 60% = $420K. Duty calculated on $420K instead of $700K — saving $12,600 in NSW (approx.).
Principal residence requirement
In most states, the OTP concession requires the property to become your principal place of residence. Investment purchases may not qualify — verify with your solicitor before relying on the concession.
PPOR required in most states
Settlement year risk
Long-dated OTP contracts (settlement 2028+) risk concession clawback if completion is delayed or the property is not occupied within the required period after settlement.
Full Settlement Cost Stack — Every Dollar You Need
📋 Complete Cost Itemization — $750K Purchase, $600K Loan, Owner-Occupier, NSW, Established Home
Cost ItemAmountNotes
Deposit (Purchase − Loan)$150,00020% deposit, no LMI required
Stamp Duty (Transfer Duty)$29,418NSW standard rate, owner-occupier
Mortgage Registration Fee$164NSW state government fee
Transfer of Land Registration$240NSW state government fee
Conveyancing / Solicitor$1,800Mid estimate, varies by complexity
Building & Pest Inspection$600Recommended for established properties
Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI)$0Not required — LVR = 80%
TOTAL CASH REQUIRED$182,22224.3% of purchase price
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Lenders Mortgage Insurance (LMI)

LMI applies when your LVR exceeds 80%. It protects the lender — not you. Rates: LVR 81–85%: 0.65% of loan. 86–90%: 1.24%. 91–95%: 1.96%. Above 95%: 2.45%. On a $600K loan at 90% LVR that is $7,440 in LMI. Avoid it by saving a 20% deposit.

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Conveyancing & Legal Fees

A conveyancer or solicitor handles title searches, contract review, and settlement coordination. Fees typically range $1,200–$2,500 for residential transactions. Leasehold properties (ACT) and commercial transactions are higher. Always engage a licensed professional — DIY conveyancing is high risk.

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Building & Pest Inspection

Strongly recommended for established homes. A building inspection costs $400–$800 and a pest inspection $150–$300. Combined reports from a single inspector are common at $500–$800. Skipping this on an established home is one of the most common costly buyer mistakes.

Commercial, OTP & Landholder Duty — Advanced Transactions
Transaction TypeHow Duty Is CalculatedKey TrapBest Strategy
Commercial / Industrial Standard progressive brackets apply in most states. VIC properties over $3M: add 6.5% premium on excess VIC $3M+ premium duty — often overlooked on commercial deals Seek advice on whether transaction qualifies as GST-free going concern supply — can eliminate GST and reduce dutiable value
Off-the-Plan (OTP) Duty on contract price × (1 − construction %) at contract date Concession clawback if not owner-occupied within required period or if settlement is delayed beyond 2028 Confirm PPOR intent in writing, set settlement date alerts, verify concession eligibility with conveyancer before signing
Landholder Duty Acquiring 50%+ (NSW/QLD) or 20%+ (VIC) of a company/trust that owns land triggers duty on the land value — even though shares/units are being bought, not land Most buyers don’t expect duty when buying shares in a property company — revenue offices look through the structure Threshold: NSW/QLD $2M land value, VIC $1M land value. Seek specialist stamp duty advice before any share/unit acquisition near these thresholds
House & Land Split Buying land + separate construction contract means duty is on land price only, not land + build price Anti-avoidance rules apply — the split must be genuine and not artificially structured to reduce duty On a $900K package with $450K land, duty is on $450K only — saving $9,500+ in QLD vs. buying an established home at $900K
Vacant Land Standard brackets apply. FHOG may apply if you intend to build and occupy as first home Unimproved land value for annual property tax and land tax purposes differs from purchase price — get a land valuation notice Check whether council rates are current, whether any caveats exist, and whether subdivision is pending — all affect dutiable value

💡 8 Ways to Reduce Your Stamp Duty Bill

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Apply for the FHB concession at contract signing. In NSW, VIC, QLD, TAS, NT, and ACT, the exemption or concession must be declared on the transfer form — it is not applied automatically. Missing this step means paying full duty.

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Consider jurisdiction in cross-border areas. Near state borders (ACT/NSW, VIC/NSW, QLD/NSW), the duty difference on the same $800K property can be $15,000–$30,000. ACT FHBs under $1M pay zero duty.

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Buy off-the-plan if it is your PPOR. OTP concessions can save $10,000–$25,000 on a $700K–$1M property. Confirm construction completion % at contract date to maximise the dutiable value reduction.

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Use the house-and-land split for new builds. Buying land + separate build contract is a legitimate strategy saving duty on the build component. Ensure contracts are separate and genuine to avoid anti-avoidance provisions.

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NSW first home buyers: model the break-even before choosing. Opting into annual property tax is irreversible. If you plan to hold long-term or are an investor, the annual tax compounds far above stamp duty over 15+ years.

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Foreign buyers: consider TAS, NT, or ACT. These three jurisdictions impose no foreign buyer surcharge duty or annual land tax surcharge. The duty saving vs. NSW or VIC on a $1M property can exceed $140,000 over 5 years.

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SMSF buyers: audit the trust deed before contract. A single overseas member with 20%+ interest in an SMSF will trigger an 8% surcharge in NSW/VIC. Restructure before signing — it cannot be undone after exchange.

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Save 25–30% of purchase price — not 10–20%. Stamp duty, LMI, and settlement costs on a $750K property in NSW can exceed $32,000 above the deposit. Always calculate your total settlement cash requirement, not just the deposit.

Worked Examples 2025–26

Real Australian Property Case Studies: Inputs to Settlement

Every figure below is computed using the calculator’s exact 2025–26 progressive bracket tables. Use these examples to cross-check your results and understand the line-by-line maths behind every dollar.

Example 1 · NSW · First Home Buyer
$750,000 Established Home — Full FHB Exemption
Single buyer · Australian resident · PPOR · Established property
Stamp Duty Payable
$0
Full FHB exemption (under $800K)
Bracket-by-Bracket Breakdown — NSW $750,000
Bracket RangeTaxable AmountRateBracket Duty
$0 – $17,000$17,0001.250%$212.50
$17,000 – $36,000$19,0001.500%$285.00
$36,000 – $97,000$61,0001.750%$1,067.50
$97,000 – $364,000$267,0003.500%$9,345.00
$364,000 – $1,016,000$386,0004.500%$17,370.00
Standard Transfer Duty Total$28,280.00
$28,280
Standard Duty (no concession)
$0
Duty after FHB Exemption
$28,280
Total Saving
3.77%
Effective Rate (if no FHB)
💡 Key Insight NSW first home buyers purchasing under $800,000 pay zero stamp duty — a saving of $28,280. This buyer also avoids LMI if they have a 20% deposit ($150,000). At $800,001 the full $28,280 would apply again — this threshold cliff makes the $750K–$800K range a very targeted buying zone.
Example 2 · NSW · First Home Buyer — Partial Concession
$950,000 New Home — Tapered Concession + $10K FHOG
Single buyer · Australian resident · New construction · Between $800K–$1M concession band
Net Duty After FHOG
$17,960
vs. $37,280 without any concession
NSW $950,000 — Step-by-Step Concession Calculation
StepItemAmount
Standard transfer duty on $950,000$37,280
FHB concession taper = ($1,000,000 − $950,000) ÷ ($1,000,000 − $800,000)= 0.25 (25%)
Concession applied = $37,280 × 25%= $9,320
Duty after partial concession = $37,280 − $9,320= $27,960
FHOG (new home grant)$10,000
Net Duty After FHOG$17,960
$37,280
Full Duty (no concession)
$9,320
FHB Partial Concession
$10,000
FHOG (new home)
💡 The Taper Formula Explained NSW applies a linear taper between $800K and $1M. At exactly $800K the concession is 100% (zero duty). At exactly $1M the concession is 0% (full duty). At $950K the buyer is 75% of the way through the concession band, so only 25% concession remains. Every $10K above $800K loses approximately $1,200–$1,400 in concession value.
Example 3 · Queensland · First Home Buyer
$680,000 New Home — $30K FHOG + Full Duty Exemption
Single buyer · Australian resident · New construction · Under $700K QLD FHB threshold
Total Government Benefit
$53,625
$23,625 duty saved + $30,000 FHOG
QLD $680,000 — Bracket Breakdown
Bracket RangeTaxable AmountRateBracket Duty
$0 – $5,000$5,0000.000%$0.00
$5,000 – $75,000$70,0001.500%$1,050.00
$75,000 – $540,000$465,0003.500%$16,275.00
$540,000 – $1,000,000$140,0004.500%$6,300.00
Standard Duty (before FHB)$23,625.00
QLD FHB Benefit Summary
Standard stamp duty (if no FHB)$23,625
FHB full exemption (under $700K)−$23,625
Duty after exemption$0
FHOG — new home grant (QLD highest in AUS)$30,000 received
Total combined benefit$53,625
💡 QLD has Australia’s highest FHOG Queensland’s $30,000 First Home Owner Grant for new homes is the largest in the country. Combined with a full duty exemption on properties under $700K, a $680K new home buyer receives $53,625 in direct government assistance. On a 10% deposit ($68K), this effectively funds 79% of the deposit from grants and savings alone.
⚠️ Threshold Risk A QLD first home buyer purchasing at $700,001 instead of $699,999 loses the full $23,625 exemption and pays full duty. This $2 price difference costs over $23,000 — the sharpest threshold cliff in Australia for FHBs. Always stay clearly under $700K, not at it.
Example 4 · Victoria · Owner-Occupier (Not FHB)
$900,000 Established Home — Full Standard Duty
Established buyer · No FHB concession · Australian resident · PPOR
Stamp Duty Payable
$45,970
Effective rate: 5.11%
VIC $900,000 — Full Bracket Breakdown
Bracket RangeTaxable AmountRateBracket Duty
$0 – $25,000$25,0001.400%$350.00
$25,000 – $130,000$105,0002.400%$2,520.00
$130,000 – $440,000$310,0005.000%$15,500.00
$440,000 – $550,000$110,0006.000%$6,600.00
$550,000 – $960,000$350,0006.000%$21,000.00
Total Transfer Duty$45,970.00
$45,970
Duty Payable
5.11%
Effective Rate
6.00%
Top Marginal Bracket
💡 VIC Is the Highest-Duty State at $900K Victoria charges $45,970 on a $900K established home — the highest of all states at this price point. NSW at $900K would be $34,280. QLD would be $30,525. WA just $22,589. The reason: VIC’s 6.0% rate kicks in at $440K, much earlier than most other states. If you are not an FHB, VIC is the most expensive state to buy in above $550K.
Example 5 · NSW · Foreign Person (Individual)
$1,500,000 Home — 5-Year Foreign Ownership Total Cost
Foreign individual · NSW · Unimproved land value $400,000 · 5-year hold
Total 5-Year Foreign Cost
$266,870
vs. $66,870 for Australian resident
NSW Foreign Buyer — Complete 5-Year Cost Stack
Standard transfer duty on $1,500,000$66,870
Foreign buyer surcharge duty: $1,500,000 × 8%$120,000
Total at Purchase (Day 1)$186,870
Annual surcharge land tax: $400,000 × 4% = $16,000/yr$16,000/yr
Cumulative surcharge land tax (5 years)$80,000
Total 5-Year Foreign Ownership Cost$266,870
Standard Duty on $1,500,000 (same for all buyers)
BracketTaxableRateDuty
$0 – $364,000$364,000Blended 1.25–3.5%$10,910
$364,000 – $1,016,000$652,0004.500%$29,340
$1,016,000 – $1,500,000$484,0005.500%$26,620
Standard Duty Total$66,870
$66,870
Australian Resident Pays
$186,870
Foreign Buyer Pays at Purchase
$16,000
Annual Land Tax Surcharge/yr
$200,000
Extra Foreign Cost Over 5 Yrs
💡 FIRB Fee Not Included This example does not include the FIRB application fee (~$14,500 for $1–$2M properties) or conveyancing. The real gap between a foreign and Australian buyer on this property is over $215,000 in 5 years. TAS, NT, and ACT have no surcharges — a foreign buyer could save $200K by selecting a no-surcharge jurisdiction.
Example 6 · NSW · First Home Buyer Choice
$850,000 Home — Should You Pay Stamp Duty or Annual Property Tax?
NSW FHB Choice · $200,000 land value · 3% annual land growth · Owner-occupier vs. investor rates
Stamp Duty (one-time)
$32,780
Break-even: Yr 26 (owner) / Yr 9 (investor)
Cumulative Annual Tax vs. One-Off Stamp Duty — $850K, $200K Land, 3% Growth
YearLand ValueOwner Tax/yrOwner CumulativeInvestor Tax/yrInvestor Cumulativevs. $32,780 SD
1$200,000$1,000$1,000$3,700$3,700Much cheaper
3$212,363$1,037$3,111$3,836$11,311Much cheaper
5$231,855$1,096$5,278$4,050$19,280Cheaper
7$252,676$1,158$7,738$4,279$27,508Cheaper
9$268,783$1,206$10,440$4,456$35,970 ⚡Investor: PAST break-even
15$311,800$1,336$18,670$4,930$65,380Owner still cheaper
20$361,222$1,484$27,680$5,473$93,240Owner still cheaper
26$430,677$1,692$33,102 ⚡Owner: PAST break-even
$32,780
Stamp Duty (one-time)
$1,000
Year 1 Tax — Owner ($400 + 0.3%)
$3,700
Year 1 Tax — Investor ($1,500 + 1.1%)
Year 26
Owner-Occupier Break-Even
Year 9
Investor Break-Even
💡 The Decision Rule Owner-occupiers: If you plan to hold the property for fewer than 26 years, opt into the annual tax. If you expect to stay 26+ years, pay stamp duty upfront. Investors: If holding fewer than 9 years, opt in. Beyond 9 years, stamp duty is the cheaper option. The investor rate ($1,500 + 1.1%) accumulates much faster and crosses the break-even threshold years earlier.
Example 7 · Queensland · House & Land Strategy
$900,000 Budget — H&L Split Saves $19,350 vs. Established Home
QLD owner-occupier · $450K land + $450K construction · Stamp duty on land price only
Stamp Duty Saving
$19,350
$14,175 vs. $33,525 on established
Option A: Buy Established Home at $900,000
BracketTaxableRateDuty
$0 – $75,000$75,000Blended 0–1.5%$1,050
$75,000 – $540,000$465,0003.500%$16,275
$540,000 – $900,000$360,0004.500%$16,200
Stamp Duty on $900K Established$33,525
Option B: Buy Land ($450K) + Separate Build Contract ($450K)
BracketTaxableRateDuty
$0 – $75,000$75,000Blended 0–1.5%$1,050
$75,000 – $450,000$375,0003.500%$13,125
Stamp Duty on $450K Land Only$14,175
Strategy Comparison
Total budget$900,000
Stamp duty — Option A (established $900K)$33,525
Stamp duty — Option B (land $450K only)$14,175
Build contract — no stamp duty payable$0 duty on build
Saving by choosing H&L Split$19,350
💡 Real-World Limitation The house-and-land split only works when the land contract and build contract are genuinely separate — not when a developer bundles them into a single dutiable transaction. Revenue offices apply anti-avoidance rules where the same entity sells land and nominates the builder. Always have your conveyancer confirm the structure is legally distinct before relying on the saving.
Example 8 · NSW · Off-the-Plan (OTP) Concession
$700,000 Apartment — 40% Complete at Contract → Save $12,600
Owner-occupier PPOR · NSW · 40% construction complete at contract signing date
OTP Stamp Duty Saving
$12,600
$13,430 vs. $26,030 on full price
OTP Dutiable Value Calculation
StepItemAmount
Contract price$700,000
Construction complete at contract date40%
OTP dutiable value = $700,000 × (1 − 40%)$420,000
Duty calculated on $420,000 only$13,430
Duty without OTP concession (full $700K)$26,030
OTP Stamp Duty Saving$12,600
$420,000
Dutiable Value (60% of price)
$13,430
Duty with OTP Concession
$12,600
Saving vs. Full Duty
💡 More Construction = Smaller Saving At 0% complete, dutiable value = $700K × 100% = $700K → no saving. At 40% complete, dutiable value = 60% × $700K = $420K → saving of $12,600. At 70% complete, dutiable value = 30% × $700K = $210K → saving of $17,680. The earlier in construction you sign, the greater the OTP concession — but the higher the settlement risk.
Example 9 · All States · Interstate Comparison
Same $750,000 Property — How Much Duty in Each State?
Owner-occupier · Australian resident · Not FHB · Established home · No surcharges
Highest vs. Lowest
$16,953 gap
VIC $36,970 vs. WA $20,017
State Duty on $750,000 Effective Rate Top Bracket Rate Bracket Breakdown FHB Threshold
🔵 NSW $28,280 3.77% 4.50% Reaches 4.5% bracket at $364K Full exempt ≤$800K
🔴 VIC $36,970 ↑ HIGHEST 4.93% 6.00% 6% bracket starts at $440K Full exempt ≤$600K
🔴 QLD $26,775 3.57% 4.50% $0 duty on first $5K (unique to QLD) Full exempt ≤$700K
🟠 WA $20,017 ↓ LOWEST 2.67% 3.00% Still in 3.0% bracket at $750K Full exempt ≤$430K
🟡 SA $28,830 3.84% 5.50% 5% rate from $300K–$500K; 5.5% above $500K No SD concession — FHOG only
🟢 TAS $25,748 3.43% 4.50% $50 min duty; 4.25% bracket from $375K Full exempt ≤$500K
🔵 ACT $28,600 3.81% 4.90% 4.9% bracket from $500K Full abolished FHB ≤$1M
🟠 NT ~$26,400 ~3.52% 4.95% Special formula below $525K applies here Concession ≤$650K
💡 Buying in VIC vs WA — Same $750K, $16,953 More in Duty A buyer purchasing a $750K established home in VIC pays $36,970 in stamp duty. The identical purchase in WA costs $20,017. That $16,953 gap — a 45% premium — is entirely due to VIC’s aggressive 6.0% rate, which activates at $440K and applies to $310K of this purchase. For buyers with flexibility on location, stamp duty alone can justify interstate comparison shopping.
Specialist Advice 2025–26

5 Conveyancer Strategies to Minimise Your Transfer Duty Bill

These are the strategies conveyancers, tax lawyers, and buyer’s agents use — not the obvious advice you find on every bank website. Each tip includes the exact maths, the legal conditions that must be met, and the dollar saving you can expect.

🏠 First Home Buyer · NSW · VIC · QLD · TAS

Negotiate Below the “Threshold Cliff” to Avoid Premium Duty Brackets

Every state has a price point where the First Home Buyer exemption disappears entirely. A $1 difference across that line can trigger $25,000–$37,000 in stamp duty. Most buyers know to “stay under the limit” — but very few understand how to use the taper band and how to negotiate a price that is safely inside the full-exemption zone.

Up to $37,280
Potential Saving — NSW
Up to $26,770
Potential Saving — VIC
Up to $23,625
Potential Saving — QLD
These savings represent the full transfer duty on properties sitting just at each state’s full-exemption ceiling. Crossing the threshold by $1 means paying this entire amount — making negotiation at these price points extremely high-stakes.
Action Plan — 5 Steps
Know your state’s exact threshold before you bid or make an offer
NSW: full exempt ≤$800K, partial taper to $1M. VIC: full exempt ≤$600K, partial to $750K. QLD: full exempt ≤$700K, partial to $800K. WA: full exempt ≤$430K, partial to $530K. TAS: full exempt ≤$500K, partial to $600K. ACT: abolished ≤$1M. NT: concession ≤$650K, partial to $800K.
Calculate the duty cliff for your specific state before inspecting
In NSW, paying $800,001 triggers $28,300 in stamp duty you would have paid $0 on at $799,999. This math must be done before you fall in love with a property — not after.
Target properties listed at “low $800s” or “high $700s” with precision
A vendor asking $815,000 in NSW may accept $799,000 once you explain that above $800K they lose access to a larger FHB buyer pool. The vendor’s loss from the lower price is often less than the stamp duty cliff the buyer faces — making this a genuine mutual-benefit negotiation.
If in the taper band — model the partial concession before offering
In NSW between $800K–$1M, every $10K in price above $800K loses approximately $1,400 in concession value. At $900K you retain 50% concession; at $950K only 25%. Run the numbers so you know the true all-in cost at each possible offer price.
Verify the declared price is the full dutiable value
Revenue offices can and do audit property sales near threshold points. The dutiable value is the greater of contract price and market value. Never artificially undervalue a property to slip under a threshold — penalties can exceed the duty saved.
StateFull Exempt CeilingDuty at CeilingDuty $1 OverCliff
NSW$800,000$0~$28,300$28,300
VIC$600,000$0~$26,770$26,770
QLD$700,000$0~$23,625$23,625
WA$430,000$0~$7,715$7,715
TAS$500,000$0~$14,935$14,935
ACT$1,000,000$0~$34,975$34,975
⚠️ The Taper Is Not a Gradual Slide — It Is a Multiplier Trap In VIC, the taper between $600K and $750K is calculated as (750K − price) ÷ 150K. At $700K the buyer still gets 33% of the $26,770 concession ($8,923 saved). But at $749,999 they only get 0.001% — effectively zero. Paying $50K more for a “better” property at $750K compared to $700K in VIC means paying an extra $17,847 in duty alone on top of the price difference.
✅ Expert Tactic: “Vendor-Neutral Repricing” When a property is listed at $805K in NSW, ask the agent to present a net analysis to the vendor: at $799,000 the vendor loses $6K in price but unlocks their property to every FHB in the market with a 20% higher buyer pool — often driving competing offers that recover the price gap entirely.
02 Tip
⚠️ SMSF · Discretionary Trust · Unit Trust · NSW · VIC

Audit Your SMSF & Trust Deed Before Exchanging Contracts — Not After

The most expensive stamp duty mistake in Australia is discovering after exchange that your SMSF or family trust is classified as a “foreign person.” One overseas member or beneficiary can trigger an 8% surcharge on the entire purchase price — an extra $68,000 on an $850K property. Revenue offices cannot be negotiated with after exchange. The deed must be clean before you sign.

$68,000
Surcharge on $850K (NSW 8%)
$120,000
Surcharge on $1.5M (NSW 8%)
$0
Surcharge if Deed Is Clean
The surcharge is assessed on the full purchase price — not just the foreign member’s share. A single overseas SMSF member holding 21% interest triggers surcharge duty on 100% of the property value. There is no pro-rata carve-out.
SMSF Trigger Checklist
All SMSF members are Australian citizens or permanent residents
No member holds 20%+ beneficial interest AND is a foreign person simultaneously
The SMSF trust deed does not permit foreign persons to become members without trustee approval
Overseas member with 22% balance — TRIGGERS full surcharge duty
Recently migrated member — check residency status at contract date, not settlement date
Member became non-resident after contract — duty is assessed at exchange, not settlement
Trust Deed Trigger Checklist
Beneficiary class is limited to Australian residents only
No potential foreign beneficiaries — including future family members who may live overseas
Deed has been reviewed by a stamp duty specialist in the relevant state within the last 12 months
Wide class — “any person related to the appointor” — could include overseas family
Deed drafted before 2015 — likely does not address foreign surcharge provisions
Unit trust with units transferable without restriction — foreign acquirer risk
⚠️ “Potential Beneficiary” Is the Hidden Trap VIC and NSW treat trusts as foreign if they have any potential foreign beneficiary — even someone who has never received a distribution and never will. A family trust deed that says “including any person the trustee determines” has been successfully challenged as including overseas persons. Revenue offices have issued assessments years after settlement.
📋 The Fix: Deed of Variation Before Exchange A stamp duty lawyer can prepare a deed of variation that expressly excludes foreign persons from the beneficiary class. Cost: $800–$2,500 depending on complexity. This must be executed and dated before the contract for sale is exchanged — not at settlement. Budget 2–3 weeks for this process.
✅ Already Have a Clean Deed? Attach a statutory declaration from the trustee confirming no foreign beneficiaries/members at the time of exchange. Keep this with your title documents. Revenue offices have a 5-year audit window on surcharge duty — having the declaration on file from day one is essential.
03 Tip
📊 NSW · First Home Buyer Choice · Owner-Occupier vs. Investor

Stack OTP Concessions, FHB Exemptions & FHOG on New Builds

Since January 2023, NSW first home buyers can opt in to an annual property tax instead of paying stamp duty upfront. The decision is permanent and cannot be changed after settlement. Most buyers focus only on the year-1 saving without modelling how the annual tax compounds over their realistic hold period. Getting this wrong costs tens of thousands of dollars over a 15-year mortgage.

~$32,780
Upfront saving if you opt in (NSW $850K)
Year 26
Owner-occupier break-even ($200K land, 3% growth)
Year 9
Investor break-even (same property)
Owner-occupiers have a very long break-even window because the annual rate is low ($400 + 0.3%). Investors face a much higher rate ($1,500 + 1.1%) that compounds rapidly — making stamp duty the better option for investment holds beyond 9 years.
The 5-Factor Decision Framework
1
Determine your actual unimproved land value — not the purchase price
The annual tax is based on the Valuer-General’s unimproved land value, not the purchase price. Get the most recent Land Value Notice from NSW Valuer-General (valuergeneral.nsw.gov.au) before modelling. A $850K property might have a $150K or $350K land value — this changes the break-even year by 8+ years.
2
Apply your realistic hold period — not the “average” 7-year figure
The median hold period in NSW is 9–11 years. But first home buyers typically hold longer — often 15–20+ years before their first upgrade. Owner-occupiers holding under 20 years in most suburban locations will still be inside the break-even window and should opt in.
3
Use the land growth rate most relevant to your suburb — not the 3% default
Inner Sydney land grows at 4–6% historically. Outer Western Sydney 2–3%. Regional NSW 1–2%. The higher the growth rate, the faster the annual tax bill grows — which shortens the break-even year and favours paying stamp duty upfront for long-term holders in high-growth areas.
4
Model the opportunity cost of the stamp duty cash saved
Opting in saves ~$32,780 upfront. If that cash is invested in an offset account at 6.25% mortgage rate, the annual interest saving is ~$2,049/yr — which partially offsets the annual tax. A complete model includes this offset benefit, not just raw tax vs. duty comparison.
5
If converting to investment later — reassess at the point of conversion
If you opt in as owner-occupier and later rent the property out, the investor rate ($1,500 + 1.1%) applies immediately. This dramatically shortens your remaining break-even period. Buyers who plan to “move up and keep” within 5–7 years should be very cautious about opting in.
ScenarioLand ValueBreak-Even YearVerdict
Owner-occ, $150K land, 3% growth$150KYear 34+✅ Opt in — very long break-even
Owner-occ, $200K land, 3% growth$200KYear 26✅ Opt in if holding <26 yrs
Owner-occ, $300K land, 5% growth$300KYear 16⚠️ Model your hold period
Owner-occ, $400K land, 5% growth$400KYear 12⚠️ Caution if holding 12+ yrs
Investor, $200K land, 3% growth$200KYear 9❌ Pay duty if holding 9+ yrs
Investor, $300K land, 3% growth$300KYear 7❌ Pay duty if holding 7+ yrs
⚠️ Eligibility Conditions Must All Be Met To opt in you must be: an Australian citizen or permanent resident; purchasing property for $1.5M or less; a first home buyer; intending to occupy as primary residence within 12 months and for a minimum of 6 continuous months. If the property does not pass the occupation requirement, the full stamp duty becomes due plus interest.
📋 The Opt-In Election Must Be Made at Settlement The First Home Buyer Choice election form is submitted through your conveyancer at settlement. It cannot be lodged after settlement, and the decision cannot be reversed. If your conveyancer does not raise this with you before settlement day, ask explicitly — missing the window means paying full stamp duty by default.
04 Tip
🏗️ All States · Off-the-Plan · House & Land · New Builds

Claim the Principal Place of Residence (PPOR) Concession Immediately

Three separate benefits can apply simultaneously to a new property purchase: the off-the-plan concession (duty on dutiable value, not contract price), the first home buyer exemption or concession, and the First Home Owner Grant cash payment. Most buyers access one. Specialist buyers access all three at once — and the combined saving can exceed $60,000.

$12,600
OTP saving — NSW $700K at 40% complete
$26,030
FHB exemption on same property
$10,000
FHOG new home grant — NSW
At $700K in NSW, a first home buyer buying off-the-plan at 0% complete would pay $0 stamp duty (FHB exemption under $800K) + receive $10,000 FHOG. The OTP concession applies where the FHB exemption doesn’t fully cover — for example, a $950K OTP apartment where partial concession + OTP stack together.
When OTP Stacks on Top of FHB Concession
1
OTP reduces the dutiable value first
The OTP concession is applied to reduce the dutiable value to (price × uncompleted %). The FHB concession or exemption then applies to this lower dutiable value — not the full contract price. This stacking order is confirmed in NSW Revenue’s assessment process.
2
Critical: OTP only applies if property is PPOR
In NSW, VIC, and QLD the OTP concession requires owner-occupation. Buying OTP as an investment disqualifies the OTP concession — full duty applies on the complete contract price. Never rely on OTP savings for investment properties without state-specific advice.
3
Confirm construction % at contract date — not at inspection
The dutiable value is calculated at the date of the contract, not at settlement. Get written confirmation from the developer of construction completion % on the specific lot you are buying. This becomes part of your stamp duty declaration — incorrect percentages attract penalties.
Scenario — NSW FHB, $920K OTP new apartmentAmount
Contract price$920,000
Construction complete at exchange30%
OTP dutiable value ($920K × 70%)$644,000
Standard duty on $644,000$23,138
FHB partial taper on $644K (below $800K)Full exemption
Duty payable after OTP + FHB$0
FHOG (new home)$10,000 received
Total benefit on $920K apartment$33,138 + $10,000
✅ The Power of Stacking OTP + FHB A $920K new apartment that is only 30% complete at exchange has a dutiable value of $644K — below the NSW $800K FHB exemption threshold. Without the OTP concession, duty on $920K would be $36,530 (plus partial FHB concession). With OTP stacking, duty is $0. The difference is $36,530 — entirely from understanding construction completion timing.
H&L Split — Key Legal Requirements
Separate contracts — land contract and build contract must be genuinely distinct documents with different parties
No linked agreement — the land contract must not be conditional on entering the build contract
Builder not same entity as land vendor — developer-nominated builders in the same corporate group may trigger anti-avoidance
Land value is genuine market value — artificially inflated land + deflated build to maximise duty split is fraudulent
Developer “package deals” — often structured as a single dutiable transaction despite having two contracts. Always have a solicitor review before signing
📋 QLD Has the Largest H&L Savings On a $900K budget with a 50/50 split, QLD buyers save $19,350 in stamp duty. NSW saves approximately $12,400. VIC saves approximately $14,200. The saving scales with the build-to-land ratio — the higher the construction value, the more duty is avoided.
05 Tip
🌏 Foreign Buyers · FIRB · State Selection · Long-Term Holding

Foreign Investors: Target No-Surcharge Jurisdictions (NT & ACT)

Australia’s foreign buyer surcharges are not uniform — they are set by each state independently. Three states (TAS, NT, ACT) impose zero surcharge duty and zero annual land tax surcharge on foreign buyers. A foreign investor purchasing a $1M property in NSW will pay $200,000 more in taxes over 5 years than the identical purchase in Tasmania. State selection is the single highest-leverage decision for non-resident buyers.

$266,870
Foreign total 5-yr cost — NSW $1.5M ($400K land)
$66,870
Same property — no surcharge state
$200,000
5-year saving by choosing right state
The $200,000 saving equals a 13.3% reduction in total acquisition cost on a $1.5M property — achieved purely through jurisdiction selection, not price negotiation. This is the most underutilised strategy among foreign buyers who focus only on purchase price.
State-by-State Foreign Buyer Tax Burden — $1M Property, $300K Land, 5-Year Hold
NSW
$226,490
VIC
$196,490
QLD
$183,525
SA
$124,780
WA
$115,704
TAS
$40,198
ACT
$38,600
NT
$36,000 est.

Includes standard duty + surcharge duty + 5-year cumulative annual land tax surcharge. No-surcharge states (TAS/ACT/NT) pay standard duty only. Calculations based on 2025–26 rates.

🏛️
Property Tax Specialist View
Foreign Buyer Acquisition Strategy
“The first question I ask every foreign investor is: are you committed to NSW or VIC, or is location flexible? In 80% of cases, the client’s actual property objectives — yield, capital growth, new build — can be met in a no-surcharge state. The $200,000 difference on a $1.5M purchase funds two years of mortgage repayments.”
StateSurcharge DutyAnnual Land TaxFIRB Required
NSW8.0%4.0%/yrYes
VIC8.0%2.0%/yrYes
QLD7.0%3.0%/yrYes
SA7.0%0.5%/yrYes
WA7.0%0.75%/yrYes
TAS0%NoneYes
ACT0%NoneYes
NT0%NoneYes
⚠️ FIRB Approval Is Required in All 8 States The Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) must approve all foreign residential purchases regardless of state. Application fees apply: $14,500 for properties $1M–$2M; $29,000 for $2M–$3M. FIRB approval typically takes 30 days. Build this into your purchase timeline — exchanging before FIRB approval is a critical risk.
Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) About Australian Transfer Duty

Every question buyers, investors, and property professionals ask about stamp duty in Australia — answered with 2025–26 rates, state-specific thresholds, and plain English explanations.

📋 18 FAQs  ·  Updated 2025–26  ·  All 8 States
🏠 The Basics — What Stamp Duty Is & How It Works
What is stamp duty in Australia? +

Stamp duty — officially called Transfer Duty in most states — is a state and territory government tax charged when you purchase property or land in Australia. It is one of the largest upfront costs in a property purchase, often exceeding $25,000–$50,000 on a typical home.

The tax is calculated as a percentage of the purchase price using progressive brackets, meaning higher-value properties attract a higher effective rate. Each state and territory sets its own rates, thresholds, and concessions entirely independently — so the duty bill on the same $750,000 property can differ by more than $16,000 depending on which state you buy in.

💡 Quick fact: The name “stamp duty” dates from when a physical government stamp was impressed onto legal documents to show duty had been paid. Most states have now formally renamed it Transfer Duty, but both terms are used interchangeably by buyers, agents, and conveyancers.
Who pays stamp duty — the buyer or the seller? +

In Australia, the buyer always pays stamp duty. It is never a seller obligation and cannot be transferred, split, or negotiated onto the vendor as part of the sale. This is set by state legislation, not contract terms.

Stamp duty is due at or before settlement and must be funded from your own savings — it is separate from your deposit. Most states require payment within 30 days of signing the contract, or earlier if settlement occurs first. NSW and VIC require payment before the title transfer is registered with the land titles office.

⚠️ Budget mistake: Many first-time buyers budget for the deposit but forget stamp duty. On a $750,000 NSW property, stamp duty alone is $28,280 — 3.8% of the purchase price — on top of your 10–20% deposit requirement.
How is stamp duty calculated? (Step-by-step with an example) +

Stamp duty uses progressive brackets — identical in principle to how income tax works. Each portion of the purchase price is taxed at the rate for that bracket only, not the entire price at the top rate. Here is the full NSW calculation on a $750,000 purchase:

Bracket RangeTaxable AmountRateDuty
$0 – $17,000$17,0001.250%$212.50
$17,000 – $36,000$19,0001.500%$285.00
$36,000 – $97,000$61,0001.750%$1,067.50
$97,000 – $364,000$267,0003.500%$9,345.00
$364,000 – $750,000$386,0004.500%$17,370.00
Total Stamp Duty$28,280

The effective rate is $28,280 ÷ $750,000 = 3.77% — much lower than the top bracket rate of 4.5%. Always compare effective rates across states when evaluating a purchase.

What is the difference between stamp duty and transfer duty? +

Stamp duty and transfer duty are the same tax. “Stamp duty” is the historical name; most states have formally renamed it “transfer duty” in their legislation. The terms are completely interchangeable in everyday use.

StateOfficial Name
New South WalesTransfer Duty
VictoriaDuty (Land Transfer Duty)
QueenslandTransfer Duty
Western AustraliaTransfer Duty
South AustraliaStamp Duty (still official)
TasmaniaDuty
ACTDuties (Conveyance Duty)
NTStamp Duty (still official)
✅ Use whichever term you prefer — your conveyancer, revenue office, and this calculator will understand both equally.
How much is stamp duty on a $500K, $750K, and $1M property in each state? +

The following table shows standard stamp duty for owner-occupiers (not FHBs) in each state at three common price points — 2025–26 rates:

State$500,000$750,000$1,000,000
NSW$17,990$28,280$40,490
VIC$25,070$36,970$55,000 est.
QLD$15,925$26,775$38,025
WA$17,765$20,017$32,114 est.
SA$21,205$28,830 est.$43,205 est.
TAS$14,935$25,748 est.$37,185 est.
ACT$22,725 est.$28,600 est.$34,975
NT~$13,000~$26,400~$39,500
⚠️ VIC charges the most at $750K–$1M due to its aggressive 6% rate from $440K. WA is cheapest at $750K. Use the calculator above for a precise bracket-by-bracket result for your exact price and state.
🏡 First Home Buyers — Grants & Concessions
Do first home buyers pay stamp duty in Australia? +

Most first home buyers receive significant stamp duty concessions or full exemptions, but the thresholds and conditions vary considerably by state:

StateFull Exemption UnderPartial Concession Up ToApplies To
NSW$800,000$1,000,000New & Established
VIC$600,000$750,000New & Established
QLD$700,000$800,000New & Established
WA$430,000$530,000New & Established
SANo stamp duty concession — FHOG onlyNew only
TAS$500,000$600,000New & Established
ACTStamp duty abolished for FHBs under $1,000,000New & Established
NT$650,000$800,000New & Established
Best state for FHBs: ACT abolishes stamp duty entirely for first home buyers under $1M. NSW has the highest full-exemption threshold at $800K. QLD provides the highest FHOG at $30,000.
What is the First Home Owner Grant (FHOG) and how does it work with stamp duty? +

The First Home Owner Grant (FHOG) is a direct cash payment to eligible first home buyers who purchase or build a new home. It is a separate benefit from the stamp duty concession — both can apply simultaneously.

StateFHOG AmountApplies ToPrice Cap
QLD$30,000New homes onlyNo price cap on grant
SA$15,000New homes onlyNo price cap
NSW$10,000New homes only$750,000 (home + land)
VIC$10,000New homes only$750,000
WA$10,000New homes only$750,000 south, $1M north
TAS$10,000New homes onlyNo price cap
NT$10,000New homes onlyNo price cap
ACTNot offeredDuty abolition insteadN/A
💡 FHOG does not apply to established/existing homes in any state — only new builds and off-the-plan purchases qualify. The grant is paid at settlement or when construction begins, depending on the state.
What is the NSW annual property tax option for first home buyers? +

Since January 2023, NSW first home buyers purchasing properties up to $1,500,000 can choose between paying stamp duty upfront or opting into an annual property tax instead. This choice is permanent and cannot be changed after settlement.

Annual tax rates:

  • Owner-occupiers: $400 + 0.3% of unimproved land value per year
  • Investors: $1,500 + 1.1% of unimproved land value per year

When to opt in: If you plan to hold the property for fewer years than the break-even point, annual tax is cheaper. For a $850K property with a $200K land value at 3% growth, owner-occupiers break even at approximately Year 26. Investors break even much earlier at approximately Year 9 — making stamp duty the better choice for most investment holds beyond 9 years.

⚠️ The decision is irrevocable. If you opt in and later convert the property to an investment, the investor rate applies immediately — significantly shortening your break-even. Always model your realistic hold period and intended use before settlement day.
🌏 Special Buyer Types — Foreign, SMSF, Trust & Investor
How much extra stamp duty do foreign buyers pay in Australia? +

Foreign buyers face two layers of additional tax — a one-time surcharge duty at purchase, and an annual land tax surcharge every year they hold the property:

StateSurcharge Duty (one-time)Annual Surcharge Land Tax
NSW+8.0%+4.0%/yr of land value
VIC+8.0%+2.0%/yr of land value
QLD+7.0%+3.0%/yr of land value
SA+7.0%+0.5%/yr of land value
WA+7.0%+0.75%/yr of land value
TASNoneNone
ACTNoneNone
NTNoneNone
💡 On a $1M NSW property with $300K land, a foreign buyer pays an extra $70,000 in surcharge duty at purchase plus $12,000 per year in land tax surcharge — totalling $130,000 more than an Australian resident over 5 years.
Does an SMSF pay stamp duty — and when does the foreign surcharge apply to an SMSF? +

Yes, an SMSF pays stamp duty at standard rates when purchasing property. The SMSF is treated as a trust for duty purposes and is assessed as the buyer.

Foreign surcharge trigger for SMSFs: An SMSF is classified as a “foreign person” — and therefore subject to the full foreign buyer surcharge duty — if any member holds 20% or more beneficial interest in the fund AND is a foreign person. This is assessed at the date of the contract, not settlement.

⚠️ Critical trap: The surcharge applies to 100% of the property value — not just the foreign member’s proportional share. A single overseas SMSF member with a 21% fund balance triggers surcharge duty on the entire purchase price. On an $850K property in NSW that is an extra $68,000 in unexpected duty.

Always audit all members’ residency status with a stamp duty specialist before an SMSF purchases property. If a member recently migrated overseas, their status at contract date determines the outcome.

Does a discretionary or family trust attract the foreign buyer surcharge? +

A discretionary (family) trust can be classified as a foreign trust — triggering the full foreign buyer surcharge — if it has any foreign beneficiaries, including potential beneficiaries. This is one of the most commonly misunderstood stamp duty rules in Australia.

Most family trust deeds use a wide beneficiary class such as “the appointor, their spouse, children, and any other person the trustee determines.” Revenue offices in NSW and VIC have taken the position that such a class could include overseas family members — making the trust potentially foreign even if no distributions have ever been made to foreign persons.

⚠️ Pre-exchange action required: A deed of variation expressly excluding foreign persons from the beneficiary class must be executed before the contract for sale is exchanged. It cannot be backdated or applied after exchange. Cost: typically $800–$2,500. This is one of the highest-return professional fees in property law.
✅ Revenue offices have a 5-year audit window on surcharge duty assessments. Even if surcharge duty is not flagged at settlement, an undisclosed foreign beneficiary found during an audit 3 years later will result in back duty plus interest and penalties.
Is stamp duty tax-deductible in Australia? +

Stamp duty on your home (PPOR) is not tax-deductible at any point.

For investment properties, stamp duty is not immediately deductible as a rental expense in the year you pay it. Instead, it is added to the property’s cost base under the capital gains tax (CGT) rules. When you eventually sell the investment property, the stamp duty forms part of the cost base calculation and directly reduces your capital gain — providing a tax benefit at the point of sale, not in the year of purchase.

Property TypeImmediate Deduction?CGT Cost Base?
Principal Place of Residence (PPOR)❌ No❌ Not applicable (CGT-exempt)
Investment Property❌ No immediate deduction✅ Yes — reduces capital gain on sale
Commercial Property (business use)⚠️ Seek specialist advice✅ Yes
⚠️ Always consult a registered tax agent (CPA or tax lawyer) for advice specific to your situation. The ATO has detailed guidance on cost base inclusion for property.
🏗️ Special Transactions — OTP, H&L, Vacant Land & Commercial
How does stamp duty work on off-the-plan (OTP) purchases? +

Off-the-plan buyers receive a concession whereby stamp duty is calculated on a reduced “dutiable value” rather than the full contract price. The dutiable value equals the contract price multiplied by the percentage of the property not yet constructed at the contract date.

Formula: Dutiable Value = Contract Price × (100% − Construction Completion %)

Example — NSW $700,000 apartment, 40% complete at exchange:
Dutiable value = $700,000 × 60% = $420,000
Duty on $420,000 = $13,430 (vs. $26,030 on full price)
Saving = $12,600

💡 Stack the concessions: A NSW first home buyer purchasing a $920,000 apartment at 30% complete has a dutiable value of $644,000 — below the $800K FHB exemption threshold. Result: $0 stamp duty + $10,000 FHOG on a property priced at $920,000.
⚠️ The OTP concession requires the property to be your principal place of residence in most states. Investment OTP purchases do not qualify. Construction completion % must be confirmed in writing by the developer at the contract date.
Does stamp duty apply to vacant land purchases? +

Yes — stamp duty applies to vacant land at the standard residential bracket rates in all states. There is no blanket exemption for bare land purchases.

However, two key strategies apply to new-build buyers on vacant land:

  • FHB concession: First home buyers purchasing vacant land intending to build their first home may qualify for FHB stamp duty concessions in some states. Check your state’s specific requirements.
  • House and Land split: If you buy the land under one contract and the construction under a separate contract with a different party (builder), stamp duty is charged only on the land price — not land + build. On a $900K QLD budget with a 50/50 land/build split, this saves $19,350 in duty.
⚠️ Anti-avoidance rules apply to H&L splits. The land and build contracts must be genuinely separate transactions. Developer-nominated builders in the same corporate group may trigger full duty on the combined price.
What is landholder duty and when does it apply? +

Landholder duty applies when an investor acquires shares or units in a company or trust that owns land in Australia, if the acquisition meets minimum thresholds. Revenue offices “look through” the entity structure and assess duty as if the underlying land had been purchased directly.

StateAcquisition ThresholdLand Value Threshold
NSW50%+ of entityLand valued $2M+
VIC20%+ of entityLand valued $1M+
QLD50%+ of entityLand valued $2M+
WA50%+ of entityLand valued $2M+
⚠️ VIC has the lowest threshold — acquiring just 20% of a company owning $1M+ in land triggers full landholder duty on the entire land value. This catches many investors who structure purchases through companies expecting to avoid stamp duty entirely.
Can I get a stamp duty refund after paying? +

Stamp duty refunds are available in specific circumstances — but the process must be initiated proactively through the relevant state revenue office:

  • Contract rescission before settlement: If the sale is cancelled before settlement, duty paid can be refunded (typically minus a small processing fee). Apply within 5 years of the rescission date.
  • Overpayment / calculation error: Revenue offices will refund any duty overpaid due to a bracket calculation error. Check your original assessment notice carefully.
  • Off-the-plan rescission: If you rescind an OTP contract within the cooling-off period or under a developer’s statutory rescission rights, duty paid is refundable.
  • Foreign buyer becomes PR/citizen: Some states (NSW) allow foreign buyers who subsequently become permanent residents or Australian citizens to apply for a refund of the surcharge duty within a specified timeframe. Check current state rules as these provisions change.
✅ Refund applications must be lodged with the state revenue office within the applicable limitation period — generally 5 years. Keep all original assessment notices and transfer documents.
⚖️ Exemptions — Transfers Between Family, Spouses & Deceased Estates
Is there a stamp duty exemption for transfers between spouses or de facto partners? +

Yes — most states provide full or partial stamp duty exemptions for property transfers between spouses, married couples, or de facto partners, particularly for the family home (PPOR). Key conditions typically include:

  • The property must be the principal place of residence of both parties
  • The transfer must be between legal spouses or registered/qualifying de facto partners
  • The transfer must not be a commercial transaction (i.e. full market value must not be changing hands as consideration)

Relationship breakdown (divorce/separation): Transfers made as part of a genuine Family Court settlement or binding financial agreement following relationship breakdown are exempt from stamp duty in all states. This is a significant and commonly used exemption that does not require the property to be a PPOR.

⚠️ Transfers between siblings, parent and adult child, or other family members generally attract full stamp duty. The exemptions are specifically for legal spouses and qualifying de facto relationships. Always confirm with a conveyancer before proceeding.
Can I include stamp duty in my home loan to avoid paying it from savings? +

In most cases, stamp duty cannot be added to your home loan and must be funded from genuine savings. Lenders assess your borrowing capacity against the security value of the property — stamp duty adds nothing to that security, so most lenders will not lend money specifically for this purpose.

Exceptions:

  • If you have sufficient equity (LVR below 80%), some lenders allow stamp duty to be capitalised into the loan. This increases your total debt and the interest you pay over the life of the loan.
  • Some lenders allow stamp duty to be included in a top-up loan post-settlement, secured against the property — but this requires sufficient equity at the time of purchase.
  • Guarantor loans may effectively “fund” stamp duty by allowing borrowing above 80% LVR without LMI — but this is a structural solution, not a direct stamp duty loan.
Budget rule: Save at least 25–28% of the purchase price to cover deposit (20%) + stamp duty (3–5%) + conveyancing + inspection costs. For a $750K NSW purchase, you need approximately $182,000+ in cash — not just the $150,000 deposit.
🧮 Ready to calculate your exact stamp duty?

Use the calculator above for a precise bracket-by-bracket breakdown — with FHB concessions, foreign surcharges, SMSF/trust checks, and a downloadable PDF settlement report.

↑ Open Calculator

All figures based on 2025–26 state revenue office rates. Stamp duty rules change annually — always verify with your state revenue office or a licensed conveyancer before exchanging contracts. This content is educational only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Rates: Revenue NSW · State Revenue Office VIC · Queensland Revenue · RevenueWA · RevenueSA · State Revenue Office TAS · ACT Revenue Office · NT Treasury.

Legal Disclaimer, State Revenue Sources & Editorial Transparency

How this calculator is built, maintained & verified
🏛️
Rate Sources
All bracket tables are sourced directly from the official state and territory revenue office legislation and public-facing rate pages. No third-party rate aggregators are used.
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Last Rate Update
All rates reflect the 2025–26 financial year (1 July 2025 – 30 June 2026). NSW rates were verified against Revenue NSW effective 1 July 2025. QLD rates verified against Queensland Revenue Office. All state thresholds were cross-checked at publication.
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Update Schedule
This calculator is reviewed each year after the 1 July state budget implementations — typically updated by 31 July each year. The rate update date is displayed on the calculator interface.
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Calculation Method
Progressive bracket calculation — identical to the method used by each state revenue office. All concessions (FHB exemptions, taper formulas, OTP dutiable value, foreign surcharges) are computed using the exact statutory formulas.
Accuracy Verified
NSW rates verified against Revenue NSW (revenue.nsw.gov.au). QLD rates verified against Queensland Revenue Office (qro.qld.gov.au). All results have been cross-checked against official government calculators at time of publication.
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Editorial Independence
USFinanceCalculators.com is an independent publisher. This calculator is not sponsored by, affiliated with, or endorsed by any state revenue office, real estate agency, mortgage broker, or property developer.
StateOfficial Source2025–26 Verified
NSWRevenue NSW✓ 1 Jul 2025
VICState Revenue Office VIC✓ 2025–26
QLDQueensland Revenue Office✓ 2025–26
WADepartment of Finance WA✓ 2025–26
SARevenueSA✓ 2025–26
TASState Revenue Office TAS✓ 2025–26
ACTACT Revenue Office✓ 2025–26
NTNT Territory Revenue Office✓ 2025–26
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Important Disclaimer: Not Financial or Legal Advice
Important limitations & professional advice notice

This calculator is provided for general educational and informational purposes only. It is intended to give users a reasonable estimate of stamp duty (transfer duty) payable on a property transaction in Australia based on publicly available 2025–26 rate tables.

This tool does not constitute financial, legal, taxation, or conveyancing advice of any kind. The output of this calculator should not be relied upon as a substitute for formal professional advice from a licensed conveyancer, solicitor, registered tax agent, or state revenue office.

Actual transfer duty assessments are made by the relevant state or territory revenue office based on the specific facts of each transaction, including the verified dutiable value, buyer eligibility, property type, and applicable concessions at the date of the contract. Revenue office assessments may differ from this calculator’s estimates.

This calculator does not cover: duty on commercial transactions, leases, mortgages, or business assets; duty on deceased estate distributions; duty on compulsory acquisitions; grants-in-lieu arrangements; corporate reconstruction exemptions; charitable organisation exemptions; or any transaction-specific exemption, ruling, or private binding ruling issued by a revenue office.

USFinanceCalculators.com, its owners, operators, and contributors accept no liability for any loss, damage, or financial consequence arising from use of or reliance on this calculator. All results are estimates only.

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Always verify with your state revenue office before settlement. Transfer duty amounts, concession eligibility, and payment deadlines must be confirmed with a licensed conveyancer or the relevant revenue authority before exchange of contracts.
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Foreign buyers: FIRB approval required in all states. This calculator estimates duty costs only. All foreign persons purchasing Australian residential property must obtain Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) approval regardless of the state selected. Consult an Australian migration and property lawyer.
NSW First Home Buyer Choice election is irrevocable. The annual property tax opt-in must be made at settlement via your conveyancer. This calculator’s break-even analysis is an educational estimate — consult a licenced conveyancer before settlement.
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Primary Sources: State Revenue Offices (SRO) & ATO Guidelines

Direct links to all 8 state & territory revenue offices + national bodies
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Professional Advice Recommendation
Stamp duty is one of the largest costs in a property transaction and is assessed under complex state legislation. Before exchanging contracts, always engage a licensed conveyancer or property solicitor to confirm your duty liability, concession eligibility, and payment deadlines. For investment properties and trust structures, a registered tax agent or stamp duty specialist should review your structure before exchange. Foreign buyers must additionally obtain FIRB approval and should consult an Australian property lawyer experienced in foreign acquisition law. For ATO guidance on property and capital gains tax, visit ato.gov.au. For consumer guidance, visit moneysmart.gov.au.

© 2025–26 USFinanceCalculators.com · Australia Stamp Duty Calculator · All rates sourced from official state and territory revenue offices · Disclaimer · Privacy Policy · Terms & Conditions · This calculator is not affiliated with, sponsored by, or endorsed by any Australian government body · Information is general in nature and does not constitute legal, financial, or taxation advice