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TwitterThis is not the latest release.
The latest release can be found on the Council Tax statistics page.
This release includes details of number of properties by Council Tax band at various geographic levels (national, regional, Local authority district, Westminster Parliamentary Constituency and lower and middle layer super output areas) together with breakdowns by property type (including bedroom count) and build period.
The counts are calculated from domestic property data for England and Wales extracted from the Valuation Office Agency’s (VOA) administrative database on 31 March 2016. Data on property types and number of bedrooms have been used to form property categories by which to view the data and data on build period has been used to create property build period categories.
The counts shown at Westminster Parliamentary Constituency and lower and middle layer super output areas are estimated by merging the VOA administrative data with the National Statistics Postcode Lookup (NSPL) file in accordance with guidance from the Office for National Statistics.
Counts in the tables are rounded to the nearest 10 with counts of zero being reported as “0” and counts fewer than 5 reported as negligible and denoted by “-“.
For further details on the information included in this release, including a glossary of terms and a variable list for the CSV format files, please refer to the statistical release notes.
The data used in the supplementary table would usually be taken at the second Monday in September. However, an IT issue occurred during the overnight schedule to produce this data. The overnight schedule was reran but was only successful for Billing Authorities in England. The overnight schedule for Billing Authorities in Wales was successful on 19 September 2016. Therefore, two supplementary tables have been published.
On 22 September 2016, a supplementary table showing the number of properties by Council Tax band and region, county and local authority district in England as at 13 September 2016 and a supplementary table showing the number of properties by Council Tax band and region, county and local authority district in Wales as at 19 September 2016 were added to this publication.
If you have any questions or comments about this release, please contact:
The VOA statistics team
Email mailto:statistics@voa.gov.uk">statistics@voa.gov.uk
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TwitterThe number of properties (in each band) being charged an empty premium and the amount of levy the London Borough of Barnet will receive.
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TwitterSummary of all local precepting authorities in England 2016-17 Average Band D Council Tax levels set by parishes in England, from 2012-13 to 2016-17 Council tax data for parishes in each local authority, 2016-17 England. This is an interactive spreadsheet where by using the drop-down button in the 'LA drop-down' sheet you can view data for all parishes within a local authority. Local precepting authorities, 2016-17 local authority summary data. Council tax data for local precepting authorities: 2015-16 and 2016-17 data. These data are as reported by billing authorities. This table lists all new parishes and parishes that no longer exist in 2016-17.
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TwitterThis release provides statistics on the challenges against entries in the Council Tax valuation lists for England (1993) and Wales (2005), including the reasons and outcomes of the challenges. It also provides statistics on changes to the Council Tax valuation lists. This is the third time the VOA has published information on the number of challenges received and the number outstanding.
Statistics are published at national, regional and local authority level.
The figures are derived from data for England and Wales, taken from the Valuation Office Agency’s (VOA) administrative database as at 31 March 2017.
Counts are rounded to the nearest 10 with counts fewer than 5 but greater than zero reported as negligible and denoted by ‘-‘. Totals may not sum due to rounding.
For further details on the information included in this release, including a glossary of terms and a variable list for the CSV format files, please refer to the release notes.
If you have any questions or comments about this release, please email the VOA statistics team at:
The VOA statistics team
Email mailto:statistics@voa.gov.uk">statistics@voa.gov.uk
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TwitterCouncil tax is a tax on domestic property set by local authorities in order to collect sufficient revenue to meet their demand. It is calculated based on the council tax band assigned to each dwelling in each local authority which are each assigned to one of nine valuation bands: A to I. This report provides details of the levels of average band D council tax in Welsh local authorities for the financial year 2015-16 and changes over 2014-15.
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TwitterThis release provides information on the collection rates and the receipts of Council Tax and non-domestic rates by local authorities for the financial year 1 April 2016 to 31 March 2017.
View live tables showing quarterly receipts of both council tax and non-domestic rates and numbers of local council tax support claimants at local authority level.
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TwitterCouncil tax is the main source of locally raised income for local authorities. It is the source of funding used to meet the shortfall between the amount an authority wishes to spend and the amount it receives from other sources. This statistical release analyses the amount of council tax that Welsh local authorities collected in the 2014-15 financial year.
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TwitterCouncil tax charges for Calderdale by band: Annual council tax charge since 1993/94; Breakdown of council tax charge since 2016/17, showing the charge for parish, social care, police and fire precepts.
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TwitterBand D Council Tax figures for local authorities since 1993.
<p class="gem-c-attachment_metadata"><span class="gem-c-attachment_attribute"><abbr title="OpenDocument Spreadsheet" class="gem-c-attachment_abbr">ODS</abbr></span>, <span class="gem-c-attachment_attribute">1.12 MB</span></p>
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This file is in an <a href="https://www.gov.uk/guidance/using-open-document-formats-odf-in-your-organisation" target="_self" class="govuk-link">OpenDocument</a> format
Average Council Tax per dwelling for local authorities since 1993.
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<p class="gem-c-attachment_metadata">
This file is in an <a href="https://www.gov.uk/guidance/using-open-document-formats-odf-in-your-organisation" target="_self" class="govuk-link">OpenDocument</a> format
Information on local precepting authorities (town and parish councils, charter trustees and Temples) and the amount of Council Tax collected on their behalf by their billing authorities in England.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
There is no description available.
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Twitterhttps://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licencehttps://reference.data.gov.uk/id/open-government-licence
If you're liable to pay Council Tax, you can apply for Council Tax Reduction. This reduces the amount of Council Tax payable by people on low incomes, including those who work but are on a low wage.
For Council Tax payers of pensionable age, a second adult rebate could be claimed. This is based on the circumstances of any other adult who lives with you, irrespective of your own financial circumstances. This can't be a partner or someone who pays rent to you.
This is not a live record. We publish it here as it retained because it's a key corporate record.
Facebook
TwitterThis is not the latest release.
The latest release can be found on the Council Tax statistics page.
This release provides statistics on the challenges against entries in the Council Tax Valuation Lists for England (1993) and Wales (2005), including the reasons and outcomes of the challenges; it also provides statistics on changes to the Council Tax Valuation Lists. This is the second time the VOA has published information on the number of challenges received and the number outstanding.
Statistics are published at national, regional and local authority level.
The figures are derived from data for England and Wales, taken from the VOA’s administrative database as at 31 March 2016.
Counts are rounded to the nearest 10 with counts fewer than five but greater than zero reported as negligible and denoted by ‘-‘. Totals may not sum due to rounding.
For further details on the information included in this release, including a glossary of terms and a variable list for the CSV format files, please refer to the Data Information and Methodology note.
If you have any questions or comments about this release, please email the VOA statistics team at:
The VOA statistics team
Email mailto:statistics@voa.gov.uk">statistics@voa.gov.uk
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TwitterThe release gives summary totals at an England level of the number of dwellings, the number of dwellings that are exempt from Council Tax, and the number liable for Council Tax.
For dwellings liable for Council Tax it also gives summary figures for the number receiving different types of Council Tax discounts and premiums.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
This data has been taken from LG Inform at http://lginform.local.gov.uk/ data reference ID 202. It shows the percentage of business rates collected in Plymouth between financial year 2008/2009 and 2015/2016. Percentage of Business rates collected - This is the amount of non-domestic rates collected during the year, expressed as a percentage of the amount of non-domestic rates due. County data is the sum of billing authorities. Source name: Communities and Local Government Collection name: Council tax collection rates Polarity: High is good Polarity is how sentiment is measured "Sentiment is usually considered to have "poles" positive and negative these are often translated into "good" and "bad" sentiment analysis is considered useful to tell us what is good and bad in our information stream
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TwitterCouncil Tax Booklet 2016-2017
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United Kingdom Weekly Household Exp: Avg: OE: HM: Council Tax & Domestic Rates data was reported at 21.000 GBP in 2016. This stayed constant from the previous number of 21.000 GBP for 2015. United Kingdom Weekly Household Exp: Avg: OE: HM: Council Tax & Domestic Rates data is updated yearly, averaging 19.700 GBP from Dec 2006 (Median) to 2016, with 11 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 21.000 GBP in 2016 and a record low of 17.200 GBP in 2006. United Kingdom Weekly Household Exp: Avg: OE: HM: Council Tax & Domestic Rates data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Office for National Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s UK – Table UK.H023: Average Weekly Household Expenditure.
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TwitterHouseboat and caravan dwellers form part of our local housing market. This dataset aims to bring together some information to help us see the scale of the issue in our local area. This includes Cambridge East Cambridgeshire Fenland Huntingdonshire South Cambridgeshire Forest Heath St Edmundsbury Peterborough This data is simply a starting point, being launched in April 2017, and at this stage is looking to bring existing data together to shed some light on the scale of this part of our housing market.There are two source of data: Council Tax records identifying the number of houseboat dwellers in 2015 and 2016. The government data is published in response to an external request for information seeking a record of the number of households who are boat dwellers in each local authority in England. They note that: "Caseworkers use Dwelling Type “TH” and Dwelling Group “72” when they identify a houseboat, captured as part of the property attributes on the VOA administrative database. Total counts for each local authority district in England are provided. Counts are rounded to the nearest 10. However, counts of zero are reported as “0” and counts between one and four (inclusive) are reported as negligible and denoted by “-“. Totals may not sum due to rounding." As the figures are rounded to the nearest 10, we can see this only gives an indication of the number of houseboats in each local authority area; in addition, a local correspondent informs us that this is "not an accurate way of calculating the numbers of houseboats since houseboats are not liable to pay council tax if the land they are moored on is not a hereditment". A web search for local marinas and moorings in the local area, undertaken in April 2017. We are very pleased to have now uploaded geo-coded data on the location of some of the marinas and moorings across the area in 2017, which has enabled us to produce a local map. We continue to seek new and improved sources of data, and updates to the goverment figures, as time progresses.
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Total new homes bonus grant payable per year
For 2013-14: total grant payable equals the total payment for the current year and for 2012-13 and 2011-12 combined. The reward is payable on increases to effective stock, where this is defined as dwellings on the valuation list less recent demolitions less long-term empty homes. Growth in the effective stock is measured from October to October.
*New Homes Bonus is paid over six years. The first year of the bonus was 2011/12. Each year, authorities receive an 'in-year' reward based on housing delivery over the preceding year, plus respective rewards for the previous five years. Therefore, average grant payable per dwelling should also reflect housing delivery in previous years e.g. Average NHB paid per dwelling in 2013/14 is equal to the sum of in-year rewards of £199m, £233m and £236m (£668m) divided by the total housing units recognised over those years: 149k, 159k, 160k (469k).
The number of affordable homes, which are measured over the financial year (April to March) and pitches on Gypsy and Traveller sites, which are counted one day in July each year, are included in the stock.
It is a measure of the financial reward for housing growth provided through the New Homes Bonus. This is a key DCLG policy.
Annually
Council Tax Base returns. Published figures are available here.
England
Yes, can be split by Local Authority area. The New Homes Bonus calculator for individual local authorities is available here:
An increase in the 'in year' NHB grant payable reflects increases in housing delivery over the preceding year. As the bonus is paid over six years, the total awards will increase until a steady stage is reached in 2016/17, where a full six years of housing delivery will be recognised for calculation of grant.
Figures are published in advance of the financial year: initial figures in December and final figures in February.
February 2016.
Official Statistics
The data used in calculating the New Homes Bonus are also used in calculating each local authority's Council Tax Base for Formula Grant purposes so this effectively ensures a 100% response rate before the release is compiled. Figures are subjected to rigorous pre-defined validation tests both within the form itself, while the form is being completed by the authority, and also in DCLG when the data are received and stored.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/new-homes-bonus-final-scheme-design--2
Facebook
TwitterThis is not the latest release.
The latest release can be found on the Council Tax statistics page.
This release includes details of number of properties by Council Tax band at various geographic levels (national, regional, Local authority district, Westminster Parliamentary Constituency and lower and middle layer super output areas) together with breakdowns by property type (including bedroom count) and build period.
The counts are calculated from domestic property data for England and Wales extracted from the Valuation Office Agency’s (VOA) administrative database on 31 March 2016. Data on property types and number of bedrooms have been used to form property categories by which to view the data and data on build period has been used to create property build period categories.
The counts shown at Westminster Parliamentary Constituency and lower and middle layer super output areas are estimated by merging the VOA administrative data with the National Statistics Postcode Lookup (NSPL) file in accordance with guidance from the Office for National Statistics.
Counts in the tables are rounded to the nearest 10 with counts of zero being reported as “0” and counts fewer than 5 reported as negligible and denoted by “-“.
For further details on the information included in this release, including a glossary of terms and a variable list for the CSV format files, please refer to the statistical release notes.
The data used in the supplementary table would usually be taken at the second Monday in September. However, an IT issue occurred during the overnight schedule to produce this data. The overnight schedule was reran but was only successful for Billing Authorities in England. The overnight schedule for Billing Authorities in Wales was successful on 19 September 2016. Therefore, two supplementary tables have been published.
On 22 September 2016, a supplementary table showing the number of properties by Council Tax band and region, county and local authority district in England as at 13 September 2016 and a supplementary table showing the number of properties by Council Tax band and region, county and local authority district in Wales as at 19 September 2016 were added to this publication.
If you have any questions or comments about this release, please contact:
The VOA statistics team
Email mailto:statistics@voa.gov.uk">statistics@voa.gov.uk