SDLTM00480 - Scope: what is chargeable: land transactions: garden or grounds – interaction with Capital Gains Tax
(This page was introduced on 25 June 2019)
Considering whether land is garden or grounds - Interaction with Capital Gains Tax
While Capital Gains Tax (CGT) considers what comprises gardens and grounds in connection with Principal Private Residence Relief (PPR) (see CG64200C onwards for further information), it should not be assumed that qualifying as ‘grounds’ for CGT purposes will equate to being ‘grounds’ for Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) purposes.
CGT legislation restricts the area of garden or grounds that may qualify for PPR, but it does not follow that any land beyond the CGT ‘permitted area’ is not the ‘garden or grounds’ (see CG64800P) – rather that it does not automatically qualify for CGT relief.
Land can still be ‘garden or grounds’ for SDLT even if it is of such a size that for CGT it would be said not to be required for the reasonable enjoyment of the dwelling (see CG64818 to CG64832).
The Court of Appeal decision in the case of Hyman and Goodfellow v HMRC [2022] EWCA Civ 185 confirms the view above.