
"Tinkering with the housing market will not deliver what the government needs. If ministers want growth, they should look at broader, bolder measures that can genuinely raise revenue and support investment"
- Kate Davies - IMLA
The Intermediary Mortgage Lenders Association (IMLA) has cautioned Chancellor Rachel Reeves against using the housing market as a convenient target for tax increases in November’s Budget. The trade body argued such measures would generate minimal revenue and risk slowing broader economic growth.
With the Treasury facing a £20 to 40 billion fiscal gap, IMLA’s latest analysis shows that all property tax proposals so far, ncluding a new annual property tax, council tax reform, and capital gains tax on main residences, would together raise less than £6 billion.
“These numbers simply don’t move the dial,” said Kate Davies, executive director of IMLA. “The Chancellor should resist the temptation to reach for politically easy but economically damaging options. Most of the property-related measures being discussed would deliver minimal revenue, take years to implement and undermine confidence in the housing market.”
Davies noted that the government should focus instead on substantial reforms capable of generating significant income more quickly, even if they are politically challenging.
“Tinkering with the housing market will not deliver what the government needs,” she added. “If ministers want growth, they should look at broader, bolder measures that can genuinely raise revenue and support investment. Small, piecemeal tax changes will just add uncertainty, hurt confidence and slow activity at exactly the wrong time.”
Housing transactions play a key role in the wider economy, supporting jobs in construction, conveyancing, surveying, removal services, home improvement, and retail. A slowdown in sales can therefore have knock-on effects across multiple sectors.
“Boosting housing activity is one of the fastest and most effective ways to stimulate wider growth,” said Davies. “Dampening it will have the opposite effect. The inevitable result of squeezing landlords and homeowners further will be fewer rental homes, higher rents and more misery for renters.”
IMLA is urging the government to create a coherent housing strategy that leverages private finance to fund new building and long-term investment, rather than implementing short-term, politically motivated tax adjustments.
“Uncertainty is deeply damaging to business confidence,” Davies said. “We may not like every decision the Chancellor takes, but the market will respond far better to clarity and conviction than to dithering and indecision.”