The 60-Day CGT Deadline: Step-by-Step Private Residence Relief Guide
Sold a UK property? Learn how to report CGT within 60 days, use private residence relief and avoid HMRC penalties.
Sold a UK property? Learn how to report CGT within 60 days, use private residence relief and avoid HMRC penalties.
You pay Capital Gains Tax (CGT) on the profit – not the sale price – of a UK property that isn’t fully covered by private residence relief. Subtract what you paid, plus buying and selling costs, from the sale proceeds, apply any reliefs, then use today’s 18% or 24% rates to work out the bill.
Image alt text: "how to calculate capital gains tax on property – step-by-step diagram 2025"
You can’t cut a tax bill you don’t fully understand, so let’s start by turning complex CGT rules into a clear checklist.
Most time-poor homeowners trip up because they skip one of these steps:
Example: Zoe bought a buy-to-let flat for £210,000 in 2012, spent £5,000 on SDLT and legal fees and £20,000 on a new kitchen (capital improvement). She sells in June 2025 for £320,000 and pays £5,000 to agents and solicitors.
That £77,000 is what her CGT rate applies to.
HMRC sets two residential-property rates (2025/26):
To decide how much of your gain is taxed at 18% or 24%, you must stack it on top of your other income.
Using Zoe again: her salary is £45,000, leaving £7,270 of basic-rate band unused (£50,270 limit in 2025/26). So:
Total CGT: £18,043.80
Quick checks before you press “pay”:
HMRC CGT rate table (checked March 2025).
Time spent here equals money saved. Allowable costs often shave 5-10% off a gain, yet HMRC’s own data shows over 30% of returns omit at least one valid deduction (Freedom of Information release, 2024).
What you can claim:
What you can’t claim:
Handy worksheet:
Mini-case study: Sam sold a house for £500,000 making a raw gain of £150,000. His £38,000 of proven improvements cut the taxable gain to £112,000, trimming his tax by £9,120 at 24%.
Feeling overwhelmed? SwiftCGT’s online, fixed-fee service (£299 sole owner, £449 joint) has chartered accountants who review your receipts and file the return within three working days.
Since 2020 you must file a UK Property CGT return and pay the tax within 60 days of completion. Penalties start at £100 for one day late and can top £1,600 plus interest if you forget for a year.
Filing routes:
Information you’ll need:
Remember: you’ll also declare the gain on your Self Assessment the following January, but any tax already paid is deducted.
[Related: Private Residence Relief explained](/private-residence-relief-guide)
DIY is fine for straightforward cases. If your sale includes joint ownership, non-resident periods or multiple reliefs, the risk of an error – and a penalty – climbs fast.
Quick aids you can try today:
Need a human to sanity-check your numbers? SwiftCGT pairs tech with HMRC-registered accountants who prepare and submit your 60-day return for a single, transparent fee. Joint sellers get 50% off the second return and a signed calculation sheet you can re-use for Self Assessment.
You can do this – but you don’t have to do it alone.
Work out your gain, knock off every allowable cost and the £3,000 annual exemption, then split what’s left between 18% and 24% rates based on your spare basic-rate band. File and pay within 60 days. Online tools can help, or a fixed-fee service such as SwiftCGT will do the maths and filing for you.