Empty property and second home Council Tax premiums and when you must pay them
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Contents
You must pay Council Tax on a property if it's:
A property is unoccupied when it's nobody's sole or main home.
Some empty or unoccupied properties may be entitled to an exemption.
An empty property premium is a percentage that we add to the Council Tax bill for a property. The percentage starts at 100% and goes up the longer a property is left empty. This means you could pay up to 4 times the Council Tax bill on an empty property.
There's no discount if you cannot live in your property because it needs major work to make it suitable to live in.
You can ask the Valuation Office Agency (VOA) to delete the property from the Council Tax list using the GOV.UK 'Challenge your Council Tax band' form.
Find out more about the criteria to delete a property from the Council Tax list (GOV.UK).
They may give it a higher Council Tax band when the major work has finished, and it's returned to the list.
You can appeal if you think that either:
If you believe you should not pay, you can appeal a Council Tax bill or decision.