Cost of Moving House in the UK 2026: Stamp Duty, Solicitors, Removals and the Hidden Extras

Moving house is one of the most expensive transactions most people will ever make — and the costs extend well beyond the deposit and mortgage. For a typical home-mover buying at the UK average house price of £285,000 (ONS, March 2026) and simultaneously selling a similarly priced property, the total cost of the move — stamp duty, legal fees, surveys, removals, estate-agent commission and incidentals — now sits at approximately £12,400.

That figure has risen sharply from the pre-2022 norm, driven by stamp-duty threshold changes, higher conveyancing fees and inflation in the removals and surveying sectors. This guide breaks down every line item so you can budget accurately — and spot where savings are possible.


The Full Moving-Cost Breakdown

The table below assumes a home-mover purchasing a £285,000 property while selling a similarly valued home. First-time buyers would pay less stamp duty; buy-to-let purchasers and second-home buyers would pay the 3% surcharge on top of standard rates.

Cost categoryWho paysTypical cost
Stamp Duty Land Tax (England)Buyer£4,250
Conveyancing solicitor (purchase)Buyer£1,200
Conveyancing solicitor (sale)Seller£700
Homebuyer survey (Level 2 RICS)Buyer£500
Mortgage arrangement / valuation feeBuyer£300
Estate-agent commission (1.2% + VAT)Seller£4,104
Removals (3-bed house, local)Both£1,000
Energy Performance Certificate (EPC)Seller£75
Mail redirection (12 months)Both£85
Miscellaneous (packing, cleaning, storage)Both£200
Total~£12,414

Figures are mid-range estimates for England in 2026. Costs in London and the South East are typically 20–40% higher for removals, surveying and conveyancing.


Stamp Duty: The Single Largest Line Item

Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) is the biggest cost for most home-movers. The standard residential rates in England and Northern Ireland, applicable from April 2025 onwards following the expiry of the temporary threshold increase, are:

Portion of purchase priceSDLT rate
£0 – £125,0000%
£125,001 – £250,0002%
£250,001 – £925,0005%
£925,001 – £1,500,00010%
Above £1,500,00012%

On a £285,000 purchase: £0 on the first £125k, £2,500 on the next £125k, and £1,750 on the final £35k = £4,250 total.

First-time buyers pay no stamp duty on purchases up to £425,000 (with relief tapering up to £625,000). Buy-to-let purchasers and second-home buyers pay a 3% surcharge on top of the standard rates at every band — adding £8,550 to the bill on a £285,000 purchase. Scotland's Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) and Wales's Land Transaction Tax (LTT) use different thresholds and rates, though the principles are similar.


Conveyancing: What You Get for the Fee

Conveyancing covers the legal work of transferring property ownership: searches, contract drafting, handling the mortgage lender's requirements, transferring funds and registering the change of title with HM Land Registry. A typical purchase-side conveyancing fee is £900–£1,500 for a freehold house, rising to £1,200–£2,000 for a leasehold flat (where the solicitor must also examine the lease, service-charge accounts and management-company arrangements).

Online and fixed-fee conveyancers have driven prices down at the budget end, with some offering purchase conveyancing for £500–£800. The trade-off is typically less personal contact and a more process-driven approach — fine for a straightforward freehold purchase, less ideal for a complex leasehold or a purchase involving a Help to Buy loan or shared ownership.


Estate-Agent Fees: The Seller's Biggest Cost

Estate-agent commission is the largest single cost on the selling side, and it is almost always calculated as a percentage of the achieved sale price plus VAT. The traditional high-street rate is 1.0–1.5% plus VAT, meaning £3,420–£5,130 on a £285,000 sale.

Online and hybrid agents — Purplebricks, Strike, Yopa — charge a fixed fee (typically £1,000–£2,000) regardless of the sale price, which can save thousands on higher-value properties. The trade-off is that you typically conduct your own viewings and handle more of the process yourself. Strike offers a genuinely free package (no sale-no-fee model funded by referral commissions from mortgage and conveyancing partners), though availability is not universal.


Removals, Surveys and the Bits That Add Up

Removals for a three-bedroom house moving locally (within the same town or city) typically cost £800–£1,400, depending on the volume of possessions, whether packing services are included, and the time of year. Summer weekends and month-ends command premium rates; a midweek move in January or February can be 20–30% cheaper. Long-distance moves (over 100 miles) cost £1,800–£3,500.

A RICS Home Survey Level 2 (formerly the HomeBuyer Report) costs £400–£600 for a typical house and is strongly recommended — it identifies structural issues, damp, roof condition and any major defects that a basic mortgage valuation will not catch. A Level 3 Building Survey (full structural survey) costs £600–£1,200 and is appropriate for older properties, listed buildings or any property in visibly poor condition.


The Contingency Fund

Every move uncovers costs that were not in the initial budget: a last-minute storage unit (£30–£60 per week), professional cleaning of the old property (£150–£300), new furniture or white goods for the new place, emergency repairs, or a bridging loan if completion dates do not align. A contingency of £1,000–£2,000 — on top of the itemised costs above — is realistic and prevents a stressful process from becoming a financially damaging one.


The cost of moving house is high, but it is not a mystery. Understanding the breakdown — and treating estate-agent fees, conveyancing quotes and removal dates as negotiable rather than fixed — can save £2,000–£5,000 on a typical move.