Australian stamp duty calculator

Transfer duty on the same home varies by tens of thousands of dollars across the country. Pick a state, enter a price, and see the exact figure from the official schedule — plus your first-home and owner-occupier outcome.

Stamp duty calculator

NSW
$21,187 transfer duty
Standard (general) duty
$21,187

NSW figures from Revenue NSW. Estimate only — your conveyancer and the revenue office confirm the exact duty. Full breakdown for $600,000 in NSW

Duty on a $600,000 home, every state

StateStandard dutyFirst home buyer
New South Wales$21,187$0NSW
Victoria$31,070$0VIC
Queensland$20,025$0QLD
Western Australia$22,515$13,630WA
South Australia$26,830$26,830SA
Tasmania$22,497.50$22,497.50TAS
Australian Capital Territory$12,728$0ACT
Northern Territory$29,700NT

Full by-state comparison and the biggest gaps →

Choose your state

How the brackets work (NSW example)

Most states use a base amount plus a marginal rate per $100 above each threshold. Here is the New South Wales schedule as an example.

NSW transfer duty (general rate)
Dutiable valueDuty payable
Up to $18,000$1.25 per $100 (minimum $20)
$18,001 to $38,000$225 + $1.50 per $100 over $18,000
$38,001 to $103,000$525 + $1.75 per $100 over $38,000
$103,001 to $387,000$1,662 + $3.50 per $100 over $103,000
$387,001 to $1,290,000$11,602 + $4.50 per $100 over $387,000
$1,290,001 to $3,870,000$52,237 + $5.50 per $100 over $1,290,000
Over $3,870,000$194,137 + $7.00 per $100 over $3,870,000

Common questions

How is stamp duty calculated in Australia?
Stamp (transfer) duty is set by each state and territory, not federally. Each uses its own bracketed schedule or formula on the property's dutiable value. On a $600,000 home, duty ranges from $12,728 to $31,070 depending on the state.
Which state has the cheapest stamp duty?
It depends on the price and whether you are an owner-occupier or first home buyer. Use the calculator and the by-state comparison to see the exact figures side by side — the ranking changes across price points.
Is stamp duty the same for investors and owner-occupiers?
Not always. Some states give owner-occupiers a concession (Queensland has a home concession; Victoria has a principal-place-of-residence rate up to $550,000). First home buyers often pay less again, or nothing, under state schemes.