Stamp duty on a $1,350,000 house in NSW

New South Wales · transfer duty

$55,537

Transfer duty on a $1,350,000 property in New South Wales at the standard rate. Verified 16 July 2026, source: Revenue NSW.

First home buyer: $55,537

A $1,350,000 value falls in the $1,290,001 to $3,870,000 band, where duty is $52,237 + $5.50 per $100 over $1,290,000 $55,537 in total.

Stamp duty calculator

NSW
$55,537 transfer duty
Standard (general) duty
$55,537

NSW figures from Revenue NSW. Estimate only — your conveyancer and the revenue office confirm the exact duty. Full breakdown for $1,350,000 in NSW

What a first home buyer or owner-occupier pays

$55,537Standard / investor rate
$55,537First home buyer

Above $1,000,000 the concession no longer applies — full duty is payable. First home buyer duty in NSW

Deposit, loan and repayments at $1,350,000

DepositDeposit amountLoanApprox. monthlyIndicative LMI
20% (no LMI)$270,000$1,080,000$6,475.15$0
10%$135,000$1,215,000$7,284.54$25,515

Repayments assume 6% p.a. over 30 years; LMI is an indicative estimate. Adjust the rate and term →

The same price in other states

StateDuty on $1,350,000
New South Wales$55,537
Victoria$74,250view
Queensland$58,150view
Western Australia$60,640.50view

Compare all eight states side by side →

NSW transfer duty schedule

NSW transfer duty (general rate). The band for $1,350,000 is highlighted.
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

Nearby prices in NSW

Common questions

How much is stamp duty on a $1,350,000 property in New South Wales?
Transfer duty is $55,537 at the NSW general rate for a $1,350,000 property, calculated from the Revenue NSW schedule. First home buyers pay the same standard duty at this price.
Is stamp duty paid on top of the purchase price?
Yes. The $55,537 duty is separate from the $1,350,000 price and is normally paid at settlement. On a 20% deposit of $270,000, budget for the duty as an additional upfront cost.
What deposit and loan do I need for a $1,350,000 home?
A 20% deposit is $270,000, leaving a $1,080,000 loan (about $6,475.15 a month at 6% over 30 years, no LMI). With a 10% deposit of $135,000 the loan is $1,215,000 and indicative LMI is around $25,515.
Do foreign buyers pay extra duty in New South Wales?
Foreign purchasers usually pay an additional surcharge on top of transfer duty. It is charged separately from the $55,537 owner-occupier figure — confirm the current surcharge rate with Revenue NSW.