Stamp duty in Tasmania (TAS)
Stamp duty, called transfer duty in Tasmania, is a one-off tax you pay when property changes hands. It is charged on the dutiable value, the higher of the price you agree to pay or the property's market value. TAS uses a progressive scale: your purchase falls into a value bracket, and you pay a fixed base amount for that bracket plus a set rate per $100 of value above the bracket floor. On a $600,000 established home, an owner-occupier pays $22,498 for 2026-27. Enter your own value in the calculator above for the exact amount.
TAS stamp duty rates 2026-27
These are the general (standard) transfer duty brackets for Tasmania. The calculator above applies them for you, along with any owner-occupier or first-home concession you qualify for.
| Dutiable value | Transfer duty |
|---|---|
| $0 to $3,000 | $50 |
| $3,000 to $25,000 | $50 plus $1.75 per $100 over $3,000 |
| $25,000 to $75,000 | $435 plus $2.25 per $100 over $25,000 |
| $75,000 to $200,000 | $1,560 plus $3.50 per $100 over $75,000 |
| $200,000 to $375,000 | $5,935 plus $4.00 per $100 over $200,000 |
| $375,000 to $725,000 | $12,935 plus $4.25 per $100 over $375,000 |
| Over $725,000 | $27,810 plus $4.50 per $100 over $725,000 |
The 100% first-home duty exemption on established homes closed to transactions settling after 30 June 2026, so standard duty now applies. Check the SRO for any replacement concession.
First home buyer concessions in TAS
The 100% first-home duty exemption on established homes closed to transactions settling after 30 June 2026, so standard duty now applies. On the $600,000 example above, an eligible first home buyer pays $22,498. Choose the first home buyer option in the calculator to see your concession, and note the First Home Owner Grant is a separate cash payment on top of any duty saving.
Frequently asked questions
Buying in another state? Use the all-states stamp duty calculator to compare duty across NSW, VIC, QLD, WA, SA, TAS, NT and the ACT.
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Simon is the founder of Orbit Money, a tool that helps people track subscriptions and recurring spend. He builds Orbit's free money calculators and writes about personal finance for Australian and UK readers.
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