Ӱ

Stamp duty ― basic rules

Produced by Tolley in association with
Corporation Tax
Guidance

Stamp duty ― basic rules

Produced by Tolley in association with
Corporation Tax
Guidance
imgtext

Introduction and scope

Stamp duty is a tax on documents and has existed for over 300 years. During the latter part of the 20th century, and in particular following the introduction of stamp duty land tax (SDLT), the scope of stamp duty has been narrowed significantly.

The documents which are now within the scope of stamp duty are broadly confined to:

  1. instruments relating to stock or marketable securities

  2. instruments transferring an interest in a partnership the assets of which include stock or marketable securities

  3. instruments which transfer UK land and buildings where the contract was entered into before 10 July 2003 and which are not within the SDLT regime

In practice, by far the most common circumstance where stamp duty is encountered is on stock transfer forms for the purchase of unquoted shares in UK registered companies.

The stamp duty statute is spread over many years, the most important legislation being the Stamp Act 1891 and FA 1999, Sch 13.

HMRC manual references are to the Stamp Taxes on Shares

Continue reading the full document
To gain access to additional expert tax guidance, workflow tools, and tax research, register for a free trial of Tolley+™
Sean Randall
Sean Randall

Partner at Blick Rothenberg , Corporate Tax


20 years’ “Big Four” stamp duty experience, including building and running KPMG’s UK stamp duty team for five years Chair of the professional body for stamp duty advisers, the Stamp Taxes Practitioners Group (over 200 members) Editor and author of Sergeant and Sims on Stamp Taxes since 2008 Former Tax Writer of the Year Author of the Law Society’s SDLT Handbook: A Guide for Residential Conveyancers Fellow of the Chartered Institute of Taxation Barrister (non-practising) Listed in Spear’s 500

Powered by

Popular Articles

Foreign tax relief

Foreign tax reliefIncome and gains may be taxable in more than one country. The UK has three ways of ensuring that the individual does not bear a double burden:1)treaty tax relief may reduce or eliminate the double tax2)if there is no treaty, the individual can claim ‘unilateral’ relief by deducting

14 Jul 2020 11:44 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more

Indexation allowance and rebasing

Indexation allowance and rebasingThis guidance note explains the general rules surrounding the availability of indexation allowance (which was frozen at December 2017) on the disposal of company assets and provides information on the rebasing rules for assets held on 31 March 1982. For an overview

14 Jul 2020 11:59 | Produced by Tolley in association with Jackie Barker of Wells Associates Read more Read more

Furnished holiday lets

Furnished holiday letsThis guidance note sets out the qualifying conditions for a property let to be treated as a furnished holiday let (FHL) for tax purposes and the subsequent tax implications.Whether or not a property qualifies as an FHL can make an important difference to the taxation

14 Jul 2020 11:46 | Produced by Tolley Read more Read more