Stamp duty on a $1,500,000 house in QLD

Queensland · transfer duty

$66,775

Transfer duty on a $1,500,000 property in Queensland at the standard rate. Verified 16 July 2026, source: Queensland Revenue Office.

Owner-occupier (home concession): $59,600 · First home buyer: $59,600

A $1,500,000 value falls in the Over $1,000,000 band, where duty is $38,025 + $5.75 per $100 over $1,000,000 $66,775 in total.

Stamp duty calculator

QLD
$59,600 transfer duty
Standard (general) duty
$66,775
Home concession (you live in the home)
$59,600

QLD figures from Queensland Revenue Office. Estimate only — your conveyancer and the revenue office confirm the exact duty. Full breakdown for $1,500,000 in QLD

What a first home buyer or owner-occupier pays

$66,775Standard / investor rate
$59,600Home concession (you live in the home)
$59,600First home buyer

Established first home: home-concession duty $59,600 less the $0 first-home concession. Phases out at $800,000. First home buyer duty in QLD

Deposit, loan and repayments at $1,500,000

DepositDeposit amountLoanApprox. monthlyIndicative LMI
20% (no LMI)$300,000$1,200,000$7,194.61$0
10%$150,000$1,350,000$8,093.93$28,350

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 $1,500,000
Queensland$66,775
New South Wales$63,787view
Victoria$82,500view
Western Australia$68,365.50view

Compare all eight states side by side →

QLD transfer duty schedule

Queensland transfer duty (general rate). The band for $1,500,000 is highlighted.
Dutiable valueDuty payable
Up to $5,000Nil
$5,001 to $75,000$1.50 per $100 over $5,000
$75,001 to $540,000$1,050 + $3.50 per $100 over $75,000
$540,001 to $1,000,000$17,325 + $4.50 per $100 over $540,000
Over $1,000,000$38,025 + $5.75 per $100 over $1,000,000

Nearby prices in QLD

Common questions

How much is stamp duty on a $1,500,000 property in Queensland?
Transfer duty is $66,775 at the QLD general rate for a $1,500,000 property, calculated from the Queensland Revenue Office schedule. An owner-occupier who lives in the home pays $59,600. As a first home buyer, a concession brings this down to about $59,600.
Is stamp duty paid on top of the purchase price?
Yes. The $66,775 duty is separate from the $1,500,000 price and is normally paid at settlement. On a 20% deposit of $300,000, budget for the duty as an additional upfront cost.
What deposit and loan do I need for a $1,500,000 home?
A 20% deposit is $300,000, leaving a $1,200,000 loan (about $7,194.61 a month at 6% over 30 years, no LMI). With a 10% deposit of $150,000 the loan is $1,350,000 and indicative LMI is around $28,350.
Do foreign buyers pay extra duty in Queensland?
Foreign purchasers usually pay an additional surcharge on top of transfer duty. It is charged separately from the $66,775 owner-occupier figure — confirm the current surcharge rate with Queensland Revenue Office.