Leaving London for the coast holds an appeal that has changed little over the years: more space, sea air,...
Buying a Holiday Home: The New Considerations for Today’s UK Buyer
The arithmetic of buying a holiday home in the UK has changed, and not in the way the headlines suggest.
For most of the past decade, buying a holiday home meant running two sums at once. One was the investor’s: rental yield, occupancy rates, the tax efficiency of a furnished let. The other was the owner’s: summers by the sea, a base the family returns to, somewhere that might one day become a permanent home. The two calculations sat so close together that buyers rarely separated them.
They have now come apart. The reforms of the past two years have fallen heavily on the first sum and barely touched the second. For the buyer who wants a home to use rather than a business to run, that distinction matters, because the headlines about a second-home retreat may describe a problem that is not yours. For some buyers, the position has quietly improved.
Beyond yield: the real point of buying a holiday home
The investment case rested on income. A property that earned its keep through peak-season lettings, with the tax treatment to match, could be justified on a spreadsheet before anyone set foot on the beach. That logic has narrowed, and the commentary has followed it down.
The owner’s case was always different. It rests on amenity, on the value of a place the family knows well enough to arrive at without planning, and on the long horizon of capital held through the generations. For many buyers that pull is part of a wider move, whether leaving London for the coast or making a home in the country for good.
None of those things depends on a letting yield, which is why the recent changes leave them largely intact. A house used twenty weekends a year and lent to grown children for the others is not an underperforming asset. It is doing exactly what it was bought to do.
Drawing that line early changes everything that follows. It shapes where you look, what you will pay to hold the property, and how you read a market often described as being in retreat, though the picture is more nuanced than that.

The tax picture, as context
The reforms are best understood as holding-cost orientation rather than a verdict. The Furnished Holiday Lettings regime, which for years gave short-term lets a favourable tax footing, ended on 6 April 2025.
Holiday lets are now taxed broadly as ordinary residential property.
This removes much of what made the investor’s sum work and very little of what made the owner’s.
Two other areas bear on the cost of an additional property, and they differ across the UK. In England and Northern Ireland, the stamp duty land tax higher-rate surcharge on additional dwellings rose from 3% to 5% for relevant transactions from 31 October 2024.
Scotland and Wales run their own regimes: in Scotland, the Additional Dwelling Supplement on Land and Buildings Transaction Tax rose to 8% from December 2024, while in Wales the higher residential rates of Land Transaction Tax rose by a percentage point across the bands from 11 December 2024.
Councils also have powers over the annual bill: in England, billing authorities may levy a second-home council tax premium of up to 100% from April 2025; in Wales the ceiling is 300%; and in Scotland councils may charge up to double the full rate. Adoption is discretionary and uneven, which is why it pays to check the local position before making an offer rather than assume a national rate.
None of this should be read as a reason to buy or not to buy. It is a general overview of where the costs now fall, not a substitute for advice shaped to your own position, which is a question for a good tax adviser. The point is narrower: these costs weigh more heavily on buyers relying on rental returns than on those whose priority is personal use.
A quieter field
Here is the part of the story the deterrent narrative tends to miss. As the investor’s sum has soured, some speculative buyers appear to have stepped back, and the data shows the effect. England recorded around 268,000 second homes for council-tax purposes in 2025, down roughly 12,000, or 4.3%, on the year before. It is reasonable to read a retreat of this kind as weighted towards buyers whose interest was financial rather than personal, since they are the ones the reforms have most affected.
For someone buying to use rather than to let, a thinner field tends to be a quieter one. Fewer competing offers can improve a buyer’s negotiating position, and stock once chased by several parties with calculators open can now, in some cases, be considered at a more deliberate pace. This is better understood as a window than a fire sale, and it favours the patient over the opportunistic. The properties worth owning for thirty years rarely come cheap, but they can come more easily when the room is less crowded.
The changing geography of the British summer
A second shift is harder to measure but increasingly hard to ignore. Successive European summers have brought record heat, with parts of the south passing 40°C, and travellers have begun to respond. Research published by the European Travel Commission in 2025 found a large majority of Europeans adjusting their travel habits to the changing climate, with a meaningful share seeking cooler destinations or avoiding the hottest ones.
The “coolcation” has moved from coinage to commentary.
This said, credible voices caution that the trend is early and partly media-driven, and that the Mediterranean’s pull is far from broken.
Treated with that caution, the implication for a British buyer is still worth weighing. A home on the domestic coast or in the country needs no flights and no transfers. It is reachable on a Friday evening and waiting again the following weekend, in a climate that some now view as more appealing for summer use than it once was. Cornwall, the wider South West, the Lake District, the Welsh coast and the Scottish shoreline read differently when summer abroad means planning around heat rather than chasing it.

The clearest sign that the climate is moving comes from an unlikely source. Southern England now enjoys roughly the growing conditions Champagne knew a few decades ago, English sparkling wine has become one of the country’s fastest-growing agricultural sectors, and the great Champagne houses have planted here, Taittinger at Domaine Evremond in Kent and Pommery in Hampshire among them.
Investment has followed the changing growing conditions north, and it would be no surprise if some holiday-home buyers came, in their quieter way, to think along similar lines.
A home across generations
For many families the most important calculation reaches furthest into the future. A holiday home is rarely just a holiday home by the time it has held twenty or thirty years of family summers. It becomes a fixed point, the place where a scattered family reliably gathers, and that gives it a weight no yield figure captures.
That weight brings its own questions, and they are easier to answer when there is time to think them through.
A home held in common will pass to the next generation in time, and a shared interest works best with a little structure behind it.
This is so differing circumstances, finances and levels of attachment among siblings have room to be accommodated rather than negotiated under pressure. These are conversations that reward being had early, while everyone can approach them calmly.
There is a tax dimension here too, and it interacts with the higher-rate rules on additional properties. At a high level, and in England and Northern Ireland, an inherited property may count as an additional dwelling for stamp duty where the beneficiary’s inherited interest exceeds half a share and was inherited within the previous thirty-six months, with separate regimes in Scotland and Wales.
The detail matters less than the principle: succession and property tax are entangled, and the family that takes advice early, on its own circumstances rather than the general picture sketched here, tends to fare better than the one that leaves it.

What to weigh before buying a holiday home
So the question is not really whether buying a holiday home still makes sense. It is for whom, where, and on what terms. A buyer who wants a return faces a harder arithmetic than three years ago. A buyer who wants a home to use, and perhaps eventually to retire to, faces a more interesting one, often with less competition and in a domestic climate that some now find more inviting.
Three things reward attention before an offer. The first is honesty about use versus yield, because that single distinction reframes everything that follows. The second is a location-by-location check on the local premium and the true annual cost of holding the property, since the council tax position varies so widely. The third is the value of good representation in a market where the best homes are tightly held and the field, in places, is thinner than it was.
This is where a buying agent earns its place. Drawing on years of experience, deep local knowledge and well-established contacts, Garrington’s regional teams help buyers weigh the true cost of a location and find the right home, including those that never reach the open market, and in a quieter field the advantage of representation can tilt further towards the buyer.
The difference between buying a holiday home and buying the right one comes down to use, timing and advice. If you are weighing a move, we would welcome a conversation. You can contact us for an initial, no-obligation discussion.
Frequently asked questions
Is buying a holiday home still worth it?
It depends on what you want from it. The recent tax changes have weakened the case for buying one purely as a rental investment, but they have had far less effect on buyers who want a home for family use and long-term ownership. For that second group, a quieter market with fewer competing buyers may make the present a more favourable time to explore a purchase.
Do you pay extra council tax on a second home?
Often, yes. From April 2025, councils in England can charge a second-home premium of up to 100% on top of the standard bill, and a majority of recorded second homes were charged a premium in 2025. The ceiling is higher in Wales, at up to 300%, and councils in Scotland may charge up to double the full rate. Adoption is at each council’s discretion, so the position varies by area and is worth checking before you buy.
Has the tax on holiday homes changed recently?
Yes. The Furnished Holiday Lettings regime ended on 6 April 2025, removing the favourable treatment that short-term lets once enjoyed. Higher-rate charges on additional properties also rose at around the same time: to 5% in England and Northern Ireland from October 2024, to 8% in Scotland from December 2024, and by a percentage point across the Welsh bands. These changes fall most heavily on owners letting commercially. Tax rules change frequently and depend on individual circumstances, so professional advice is recommended.