Stamp Duty Calculator NSW FY2026-27

This calculator works out NSW transfer (stamp) duty on a property purchase — duty payable, the effective rate on the property value, and the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme exemption or concession if you qualify — using Revenue NSW's own FY2026-27 rate table and FHBAS thresholds.

Enter the property's dutiable value (usually the purchase price, or market value if higher) and whether you're buying as a first home buyer.

Calculate your stamp duty

The dutiable value — your purchase price, or the property's market value if that's higher.

First home buyer applies the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme (new and existing homes currently share the same thresholds — see the FAQs below).

Standard transfer duty: $32,437 — an effective rate of 3.8% on the property value.

This is general information, not financial or tax advice — consider a registered tax agent, solicitor or conveyancer for guidance specific to your purchase.

Estimates for general information — not financial or tax advice. Method, rates and sources are published below.

Stamp duty by property value, standard vs first home buyer (FY2026-27)

Duty payable for a range of property values, computed from the engine above. Cells marked † are outside the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme's concession range ($1,000,000 and above) — the standard rate applies with no saving.

Property value Standard duty First home buyer duty FHB saving
$600,000 $21,187 $0 $21,187
$750,000 $27,937 $0 $27,937
$850,000 $32,437 $9,797 $22,640
$1,000,000 $39,187 $39,187 † $0 †
$1,500,000 $63,787 $63,787 † $0 †
$2,000,000 $91,287 $91,287 † $0 †

† At $1,000,000 or above, the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme no longer applies — the standard duty rate is payable regardless of buyer type.

How this is calculated

NSW transfer duty is a bracketed, marginal-style schedule: each bracket has a published base amount of duty owed at its floor, plus a marginal rate applied to the excess above that floor. The rate is "per $100, or part" — the excess is rounded UP to the next whole $100 before the rate applies, so two dutiable values in the same $100 band can produce identical duty (see the worked $650,050/$650,100 example in this engine's own tests). Above the premium threshold ($3,870,000 for FY2026-27), a higher marginal rate applies to the excess above the threshold — modelled here as simply the schedule's top bracket, not a separate calculation.

Dutiable value Base duty at floor Marginal rate on excess
$0 – $18,000 $0 1.3% per $100
$18,000 – $38,000 $225 1.5% per $100
$38,000 – $103,000 $525 1.8% per $100
$103,000 – $387,000 $1,662 3.5% per $100
$387,000 – $1,290,000 $11,602 4.5% per $100
$1,290,000 – $3,870,000 $52,237 5.5% per $100
$3,870,000 and over $194,137 7% per $100

The First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme is a full exemption (zero duty) at or below $800,000, then a concessional band from $800,000 up to (but not including) $1,000,000 where duty phases in linearly from $0 up to the standard rate. Revenue NSW's own pages state these thresholds but not a published formula for the phase — the phase-in used here was reverse-engineered from Revenue NSW's own First Home Buyers Assistance calculator (multiple values checked, including the exact $1,000,000 cutoff), not from a government-published equation. See this engine's own tests for the worked evidence.

Sources

Assumptions used here follow the same general approach as ASIC's MoneySmart calculators and may not reflect every personal circumstance — see "What this doesn't model" for specifics.

What this doesn't model

If any of these apply to you, the duty you actually owe will differ from the figures above.

Frequently asked questions

How much is stamp duty on $850k in NSW?

For a standard purchase at $850,000, NSW transfer duty is $32,437 — an effective rate of 3.8% of the property value, for FY2026-27. If you qualify as a first home buyer, the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme cuts that to $9,797 instead, a saving of $22,640 — see the next question for the eligibility thresholds.

First home buyer exemption thresholds?

Under the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme, a new or existing home valued at $800,000 or less pays no transfer duty at all (a $500,000 home, for example, saves the full $16,687 it would otherwise cost). Between $800,000 and $1,000,000 you pay a reduced, phased-in rate instead of the full exemption — at $815,000, for instance, that's $2,939 rather than the standard $30,862. At $1,000,000 or above, no concession applies and you pay the standard rate. Vacant land you intend to build on has its own, lower thresholds ($350,000 exempt, concessional up to $450,000) — not modelled on this page.

When is stamp duty payable?

Transfer duty must be paid within three months of the date of exchange of contracts, to avoid interest charges — the date of exchange is whatever date is shown on the contract, not the later settlement date. Your solicitor or conveyancer normally arranges payment as part of settlement.

Is stamp duty different for investment properties?

The standard transfer duty rate itself is the same bracket schedule whether the property is owner-occupied or an investment — NSW doesn't charge a different general duty rate for investors. What does differ is eligibility for concessions: the First Home Buyers Assistance Scheme requires you to move in within 12 months of settlement and live there as your principal residence for at least 12 continuous months, so an investment property you don't intend to occupy won't qualify even if you're otherwise an eligible first home buyer. Separately, investment properties can attract land tax (an annual charge, not a one-off duty) that this page doesn't cover — see the land tax calculator.

Why does my bank's or conveyancer's calculator differ?

Most likely extra costs this page deliberately doesn't fold into the duty figure: a $20 fee for each duplicate and each transfer, mortgage registration fees, and — if you're a foreign person — a flat 9% foreign (surcharge) purchaser duty on top of standard transfer duty, calculated separately. Some lender tools also bundle in their own estimated conveyancing or inspection costs, which aren't duty at all. If a figure differs by more than a rounding difference and none of those explain it, check the property value and buyer-type inputs match exactly.