Capital Gains Tax UK Calculator 2026/27
Calculate UK Capital Gains Tax instantly for property, shares, and other assets. Uses 2026/27 rates: £3,000 annual exemption, 18%/24% for residential property, 10%/20% for other assets, and BADR at 10%.
Capital Gains Tax UK Calculator Tool
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Why use this free capital gains tax uk calculator?
Built with the inputs and context most competing calculators skip - deeper parameters, current rates, and actionable results.
How to use this capital gains tax uk calculator
UK Capital Gains Tax rates 2024/25
| Asset type | Basic rate taxpayer | Higher rate taxpayer | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Residential property | 18% | 24% | Oct 2024 Budget rates |
| Shares, funds, other | 18% | 24% | Rate increased Oct 2024 |
| Business Asset Disposal Relief (2026/27) | 18% flat | 18% flat | £1M lifetime limit. Was 14% (2025/26), 10% (2024/25) |
| BADR history | 10% (pre-Apr 2025) | 14% (2025/26) | 18% (2026/27 onwards) |
| Annual exempt amount | £3,000 | £3,000 | 2024/25 (was £6,000 in 2023/24) |
| Reporting deadline | 60 days (property) | Tax return (other) | Property: 60 days from completion |
How this calculator compares
LazyTools fills the gaps most competing tools leave open - current rates, deeper inputs, and actionable context.
| Feature | LazyTools | Which? | TaxCalc | HMRC online |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| October 2024 Budget rates | ✓ Yes | ✗ | ✓ | ✗ |
| BADR calculation | ✓ Yes | ✓ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Prior year losses | ✓ Yes | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Income-based rate split | ✓ Yes | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ |
| Annual exempt amount | ✓ Yes | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Free, no registration | ✓ Yes | ✓ | ✗ | ✓ |
Capital Gains Tax UK Calculator: Complete Guide
Capital Gains Tax is charged on profits when you sell assets that have increased in value. Understanding the 2026/27 rates, thresholds, and reliefs is essential for both tax planning and compliance, particularly following the significant changes made in the October 2024 Budget.
CGT rates changed in October 2024 Budget
Chancellor Rachel Reeves changed CGT rates in the October 2024 Budget: the higher rate on residential property decreased from 28% to 24%, while rates on shares and other assets increased from 10%/20% to 18%/24% - wait, let us be precise. The correct 2026/27 position after the Budget is: residential property 18% basic / 24% higher (unchanged from pre-Budget on basic, reduced from 28% on higher); shares and other assets 18% basic / 24% higher from 30 October 2024. The previous rates of 10%/20% applied up to 30 October 2024. Use this calculator with the current post-Budget rates.
How CGT interacts with income tax
Your capital gains are added to your income to determine the CGT rate. If your income fills the basic rate band (up to £50,270), gains that fall within the remaining basic rate band are taxed at the lower rate; gains above the basic rate band use the higher rate. This means a basic rate taxpayer with a large capital gain may pay CGT at both rates on the same disposal.
The annual exempt amount: use it wisely
The £3,000 annual exempt amount resets each 6 April. It cannot be transferred to a spouse (though spouses each have their own exemption), carried back to previous years, or carried forward. Strategic planning around the annual exemption - for example, bed and ISA arrangements to crystallise gains within the exemption each year - can significantly reduce lifetime CGT liability. With the exemption now at £3,000 compared to £12,300 three years ago, this planning opportunity has diminished but remains relevant.
Business Asset Disposal Relief: key qualifying conditions
BADR requires: the business has been a trading company (not investment company) for at least 2 years; you have been a director or employee and held at least 5% of the ordinary shares and 5% of the voting rights for 2 years. The £1 million lifetime limit applies. BADR rate for 2026/27 is 18% (aligned with basic CGT rate). The relief saves 6 percentage points vs the 24% higher rate on the first £1M of qualifying gain - for 2026/27 the rate is 18%, meaning BADR now only protects against the 24% higher rate — saving 6p per qualifying pound.
CGT planning strategies
Key strategies: (1) Use ISA wrapper - gains within an ISA are completely exempt. (2) Transfer assets to spouse before sale to use both annual exemptions. (3) Crystallise losses in the same tax year as gains to offset. (4) Time large gains across two tax years to use two annual exemptions. (5) Consider pension contributions to reduce income and push more gains into the basic rate band. (6) EIS/SEIS reinvestment relief can defer or reduce CGT on qualifying business investments.
Frequently asked questions
How to use this calculator for tax planning
Financial calculations are most valuable when used proactively - before making decisions, not after. Use this calculator to model different scenarios: what happens if you increase the investment amount by 20%? What if the tenure changes by 5 years? What if the interest rate moves by 1%? Scenario modelling with a calculator is free and takes minutes, but the decisions it informs can save or earn lakhs of rupees over a lifetime. Revisit your calculations annually as rates, tax rules, and personal circumstances change - the financial landscape in India evolves significantly year to year.
Regulatory and rate changes to watch in 2024-25
The financial year 2024-25 has seen significant changes affecting personal finance calculations in India and the UK. In India: Union Budget July 2024 increased LTCG rate to 12.5% and exemption to Rs.1.25 lakh; STCG on equity increased to 20%; small savings scheme rates have been stable since January 2024. In the UK: April 2024 saw employee NI reduce from 12% to 8% and self-employed Class 4 reduce from 9% to 6%; CGT rates on residential property changed to 18%/24% following the October 2024 Budget. Always verify current rates with official sources (income tax India: incometax.gov.in; HMRC UK: gov.uk/government/organisations/hm-revenue-customs) before making significant financial decisions.
Common mistakes in personal finance calculations
The most common errors in personal financial planning: (1) Using pre-tax return rates when the investment is taxable - always compare on a post-tax basis. (2) Ignoring inflation when planning long-term goals - Rs.10 lakh needed in 20 years requires Rs.32 lakh at 6% inflation. (3) Not accounting for charges: expense ratio on mutual funds, processing fee on loans, and withdrawal penalties on fixed income instruments all reduce actual returns. (4) Planning for best-case returns rather than conservative estimates - model at 10% return, not 15%, for long-term equity SIP projections. (5) Treating past performance as future guarantee - historical equity fund returns have been volatile decade to decade.
Privacy and data security
All calculations on LazyTools run entirely in your browser using JavaScript. No input data - salary, investment amounts, loan details, or personal information - is transmitted to any server, stored in any database, or shared with any third party. The calculator works offline once the page has loaded (except Google Fonts). LazyTools is monetised through Google AdSense display advertising, which uses advertising cookies independent of calculator functionality. If you prefer completely ad-free use, your browser's reading mode or a content blocker will hide the ad units without affecting the calculator.
Linking this calculator to your broader financial plan
No single financial calculator exists in isolation. Take-home pay calculations feed into EMI affordability checks. Loan EMI calculations feed into investment capacity planning. Investment corpus calculations feed into retirement income planning. Use the related tools linked below to build a complete picture of your financial position. A comprehensive financial plan typically covers: income and tax optimisation (salary structure, HRA, 80C investments); debt management (home loan, car loan, personal loan); medium-term savings (SIP, ELSS, PPF, RD); and long-term retirement planning (EPF, NPS, SSY for daughter). Each LazyTools calculator addresses one piece of this puzzle.
Legislation and government sources (2026/27 tax year)
This calculator uses rates and rules from the following Acts of Parliament and HMRC guidance documents. All rates are for the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027) unless stated otherwise. Verify current rates at gov.uk before making significant financial decisions:
- HMRC — Capital Gains Tax rates and allowances 2026/27
- Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 (TCGA 1992) — main CGT legislation
- Finance Act 2025 — BADR rate increased to 14% from 6 April 2025
- Finance Act 2026 — BADR rate increased to 18% from 6 April 2026
- Autumn Budget 2024 — CGT rates aligned at 18%/24% from 30 October 2024
- HMRC — CGT rates of tax (official policy note)
- HMRC — Business Asset Disposal Relief (formerly Entrepreneurs Relief)
Disclaimer: This calculator provides mathematical calculations only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Rates correct as at May 2026 (2026/27 tax year). Consult a qualified accountant, tax adviser, or financial planner for advice specific to your circumstances.