First Published By: TheGuardian
Scrapping discount for second home owners could raise £42m a year to tackle housing crisis, claims report
Council Tax breaks
for second home-owners should be scrapped and the money ploughed into tackling
the UK's housing crisis, according to a leading charity. Councils can currently reduce Council Tax for second homeowners
by up to 50%, an option offered by one in five local authorities. Four in five
offer the minimum discount of 10%.
Taking Stock, a report by Shelter, claims that ending the discount for the UK's 252,000 second homes would raise
up to £42m a year.
Second home ownership has grown dramatically since the
1990s, particularly in rural and coastal areas such as Cornwall, Norfolk and
Cumbria, where some claim it pushes up house prices, making property unaffordable
for local people.
"The Council Tax
discount is effectively a tax break for people with second homes which often
lie empty for large parts of the year," said Shelter's chief executive,
Campbell Robb. "Enabling councils to charge the full rate of Council Tax, or higher, would mean they
could raise vital revenue that could be used to deliver affordable housing for
local people."
The report also proposes that councils are given powers to
set Council Tax higher than the
standard rate for properties that are rarely in use. Shelter's call to abolish tax breaks for second homes has
received enthusiastic support from some MPs. "We shouldn't be subsidising
the richer people on the Council Tax
tree," said Tim Farron, Lib Dem spokesman on rural affairs. "Those
people who can afford to have a second home should pay the same amount of
tax."
The call may also strike a chord with the government.
Business secretary Vince Cable recently floated the idea of a "mansion
tax" on properties valued above a certain amount.
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I support Council Tax Rebates in assisting home owners and tenants in getting a rebate on their over-paid Council Tax.