HK issues guidance on special stamp duty

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

HK issues guidance on special stamp duty

The Hong Kong Inland Revenue Department has finally issued interpretation and practice notes concerning the special stamp duty, eight months after the levy was first introduced.

The special stamp duty (SSD) was unveiled last November in an attempt to reduce short-term speculation in the territory’s property market.

The SSD is imposed on residential property transactions of all values acquired from November 20 2010 and resold within two years.

Stamp Office Interpretation and Practice Notes No.5 clarifies that the SSD will be based on different holding periods: 15% for property held for six months or less; 10% for more than six months but less than one year; and 5% for more than one year but less than two years.

The sale and purchase of a property is also defined within the notes.

If a taxpayer is deemed to have disposed of a residential property on the date they enter into a chargeable agreement as vendor to dispose of the property. If there is no such agreement for sale, the date of a conveyance to dispose of the property is the date of the disposal.

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Despite the decline in profitability, the firm’s tax advisory business delivered a 3.4% revenue growth
Firms are making use of inventories and ample profit margins to avoid or absorb the initial impact of higher tariffs, an OECD report said
While UN proposals to shift airline taxation from a residence-based system to a source-state one are not set in stone, ex-British Airways CEO Willie Walsh warns they would increase costs and complexity
Von Wobeser y Sierra’s head of tax shares best practices for resolving tax controversy and touts his firm’s founding partner as an exemplar of legal practice
ITR concludes its analysis of World Tax’s rankings for 2026 by highlighting the firms that stood out most on a global scale
Experts from law firm Kennedys outline the key tax disputes trends set to define 2026, ranging from increased enforcement to continued tariff drama and AI usage
They also warned against an ‘unnecessary duplication of efforts’ in UN tax convention negotiations; in other news, White & Case has hired Freshfields’ former French tax head
Awards
Submit your nominations to this year's WIBL EMEA Awards by 16 February 2026
Defending loss situations in TP is not about denying the existence of losses but about showing, through proactive measures, that the losses reflect genuine commercial realities
Further empowerment of HMRC enforcement has been praised, but the pre-Budget OBR leak was described as ‘shambolic’
Gift this article