Latest News Tue, Mar 25, 2025 7:08 AM
The Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government has announced the implementation timeline for the Building Safety Levy has been pushed back from Autumn 2025 to Autumn 2026.
It has published the Government’s response to the building safety levy technical consultation which ran from 23 January 2024 to 20 February 2024.
The key design elements of the levy arising from the consultation response include:
– the process for calculation and collection of the levy,
– the use of Gross Internal Area to measure floorspace for the purposes of calculating levy liability,
– the approach to identifying brownfield land that will qualify for the discount rate,
– the levy disputes process, and
– confirming further types of accommodation that will be subject to exclusion.
Ministers have now determined that the levy will now come into effect in Autumn 2026. This will give the relevant local authorities, the Building Safety Regulator and Registered Building Control Approvers more time to prepare for the levy; and housing developers who will pay the levy will also have more time to factor levy costs into their financial planning.
The Government has also announced the levy rates for local authorities, that will be applied when the levy comes into force. These levy rates will be set in regulations and are subject to parliamentary agreement of the levy secondary legislation, which will be laid later this year. Levy rates for each local authority area are set using average house prices for that area, so the levy rate is highest in those areas with the highest house prices, and lowest in those areas with the lowest house prices.
A discounted rate of 50% of the standard levy rate has been set for works on previously developed (sometimes known as ‘brownfield’) land, to reflect the higher cost of building on this type of land. The levy will be charged per square-metre of floorspace in a chargeable development. The rates are therefore set per square-metre.
Further information on the levy will be available later this year when regulations are laid in Parliament and related interim guidance is published.
Other levy design features remain as previously announced: the levy will be charged on new dwellings and purpose-built student accommodation in England, and must be paid before a completion certificate can be issued. Exemptions are provided for affordable housing, developments of fewer than 10 units and other important community facilities.
Local authorities with building control responsibilities will act as collection authorities for the levy.
Neil Jefferson, Chief Executive at the Home Builders Federation said; “The delay to the implementation of this new tax on home building is welcome recognition from government that these additional costs will inevitably constrain housing supply, but the news that ministers will still press ahead with this grossly unfair levy rather than obtaining contributions from powerful product manufacturers is a disappointment.
“As proposed it will add thousands of pounds to the cost of new homes, threatening the viability of sites across swathes of the country at a time when industry is striving to reverse the decline in home building numbers that we have seen in recent years.
“UK house builders are already paying over £6bn to remediate all their own buildings as well as those build by other parties through the pre-existing building safety tax. Surely the companies that tested and supplied the dangerous materials, still yet to contribute a penny, should be targeted before Government imposes yet another tax on British businesses, many of whom have never built anything taller than a typical family house."
Featured News
Steel systems specialist, Schüco Jansen, has introduced a new internal fire door...
HIKMICRO, a global leader in thermal imaging solutions, now has a complete water...
BUILDING PRODUCT LIBRARY - LATEST BROCHURES
Your high performanc...
By James Hardie
James Hardie brings...
By James Hardie
fermacell® The Speci...
By James Hardie
Hardie backer fibre...
By James Hardie
RIVERSTONE® - DISCOV...
By SSQ
BUILDING PRODUCT DIRECTORY - LATEST PRODUCTS
Senses Kitchen Surfaces. Beautifully Crafted, Effortlessly Maintained. The Senses range of...
FASSA's new SM 485: Your choice for a fast-setting, self-levelling smooth coat for interior floors,...
FASSA's new SL 416: A fast-setting, self-levelling smooth coat for interior floors. With superb...
CONSTRUCTION VIDEOS - LATEST VIDEOS
Specification Insights with Majestic London Showers
“Building with stone wool insulated sandwich panels” written by Professor Imperadori, is now...
Portakabin | Installation at the iconic Admiralty Arch, London