How to challenge your council tax band (and win)
If you believe your council tax band is wrong, you can challenge it via the Valuation Office Agency (VOA).
Valid grounds to challenge your council tax band
You can challenge your council tax band if:1
- Material change: The property has changed significantly (e.g., demolished, split into flats, merged with another property)
- Error in the band: The VOA made an error when banding the property (wrong address, wrong property type, wrong valuation)
- You've just become the liable person: You've recently moved in or become responsible for council tax and believe the band is wrong based on comparable properties
You cannot challenge just because you think the band is too high. You need evidence that the band is wrong (usually by comparing your property to similar properties in your area that are in lower bands).
What counts as a material change?
A material change is a significant change to the property's physical state or use. Examples include:
- Demolition (whole property or substantial part)
- Splitting a property into multiple dwellings (e.g., house converted to 2 flats)
- Merging properties (e.g., 2 flats converted into 1 house)
- Change in physical state (e.g., property becomes derelict, or is rebuilt after fire damage)
Extensions, loft conversions, and home improvements do not count as material changes. Council tax bands are based on the property's value in 1991 (England and Scotland) or 2003 (Wales), so changes made after that date do not affect the band unless they constitute a material change.2
How to challenge your council tax band
Challenge your band through the VOA (Valuation Office Agency) in England and Wales, or the Scottish Assessors Association in Scotland. The process is:
- Visit the VOA website and complete the online challenge form (called a 'Check and Challenge' or 'Proposal')
- Explain why you believe your band is wrong (e.g., 'Comparable properties in my street are in Band C but mine is Band D')
- Provide evidence (see below)
- Wait for the VOA to review your challenge (typically 2-4 months)
- The VOA will either accept your challenge (reduce your band), reject it (band stays the same), or increase your band if they find it's too low
Challenges are free. You do not need to hire a solicitor or council tax band specialist (though some people use them for complex cases).
Evidence needed to challenge your band
The strongest evidence is comparable properties in your area that are in lower bands. To build a strong case:
- Find 5-10 properties in your street or immediate area that are similar to yours (same number of bedrooms, similar size, similar age)
- Check their council tax bands (use the VOA website or council tax band checker tool)
- Take photos of the properties and note similarities (e.g., 'My property is a 3-bed semi identical to No. 12, which is Band C. I am Band D.')
- Get recent sale prices for comparable properties (use Rightmove, Zoopla, or Land Registry sold price data)
Other useful evidence:
- 1991 valuation evidence (e.g., estate agent valuations from 1991, house price indices showing your property would have been worth less in 1991 than the Band D threshold)
- Building plans or title deeds showing the property's size and layout
- Photos showing the property's condition (if you're claiming it's in poor condition compared to neighbours)
Do not rely on recent sale prices alone. Council tax bands are based on 1991 values (or 2003 in Wales), not current values. However, if your property sold for significantly less than neighbours in the same band, this suggests the band may be wrong.3
Process and timeline for band challenges
The challenge process takes 3-6 months on average:
- Submit challenge: Complete the online form and provide evidence (1 hour)
- VOA reviews: The VOA investigates your claim, checks comparable properties, and may visit your property (2-4 months)
- VOA decision: The VOA issues a decision (band reduced, stays the same, or increased)
- Appeal (if you disagree): You can appeal to the Valuation Tribunal within 3 months of the VOA decision (tribunal hearing takes another 6-12 months)
You must continue to pay council tax at the current band during the challenge. If your band is reduced, you'll get a refund backdated to the date you became liable (e.g., when you moved in) or the date of the material change.
Success rates for council tax band challenges
Around 30-40% of challenges result in a band reduction. Success rates are higher if you have strong evidence (multiple comparable properties in lower bands) and lower if you're challenging without clear comparables.
The VOA may increase your band if they find it's too low. This happens in around 5-10% of challenges. If you're challenging and your band is obviously too low (e.g., you're in Band A but your property is larger and better than all your neighbours in Band B), the VOA may increase your band rather than reduce it.
To minimise the risk of an increase, only challenge if you have clear evidence your band is wrong.
What if you lose the challenge?
If the VOA rejects your challenge, you can:
- Accept the decision and continue paying at the current band
- Appeal to the Valuation Tribunal (within 3 months of the VOA decision)
The Valuation Tribunal is an independent body that reviews VOA decisions. You present your evidence at a hearing (usually in person or by video) and the tribunal decides whether your band should be reduced. Tribunal appeals are free but take 6-12 months.4
If the tribunal rejects your appeal, you can only challenge again if there's a new material change to the property or if you move out and a new occupier challenges.
Council tax during the challenge period
You must continue to pay council tax at the current band rate during the challenge. Do not stop paying or reduce your payments. If you do, the council will pursue you for arrears, court costs, and bailiff fees.
If your challenge is successful and your band is reduced, you'll get a refund for the overpayment. The refund is backdated to:
- The date you became liable (when you moved in), if you challenged within 6 months of moving in
- The date of the material change, if you're challenging due to a material change
- The date the VOA made an error, if you're challenging due to an error
Refunds can be several hundred pounds if you've been overpaying for years.
When you cannot challenge your band
You cannot challenge if:
- You've already challenged in the past and the VOA or tribunal rejected it (unless there's been a material change since then)
- You're not the liable person (only the person responsible for council tax can challenge, not tenants or lodgers)
- You're challenging purely because you think council tax is too expensive (you need evidence the band is wrong, not just that you disagree with the charge)
If you've just moved in, you have 6 months to challenge without needing to show a material change. After 6 months, you can only challenge if there's been a material change or error.
What happens if your band is reduced?
If the VOA reduces your band:
- Your council tax bill is recalculated at the lower band rate
- You get a refund for overpayments (backdated as above)
- Future bills are charged at the lower rate
The band reduction is permanent (unless there's a future material change that increases the band again). If you sell the property, the new owner pays council tax at the reduced band.
Should you hire a council tax band specialist?
Some companies offer to challenge your band for a fee (typically 30-50% of the first year's saving if successful, or a flat fee of £100-£200). You do not need to use them. The challenge process is free and straightforward if you have the evidence.
Specialists may be useful if:
- Your case is complex (e.g., dispute over whether a change is material)
- You're appealing to the Valuation Tribunal and want representation
- You don't have time to gather evidence and submit the challenge yourself
Most people can challenge successfully without paying a specialist.
Related guides
- Council tax bands explained (how bands work and band thresholds)
- Check your council tax band (homepage tool)
- Council tax reduction (income-based support)
Sources
- GOV.UK, Challenge your council tax band, https://www.gov.uk/challenge-council-tax-band, accessed 18 May 2026
- Valuation Office Agency, Council tax: your property's band and how to challenge it, gov.uk, accessed 18 May 2026
- Which?, How to challenge your council tax band, which.co.uk, accessed 18 May 2026
- Valuation Tribunal Service, Council tax appeals, valuationtribunal.gov.uk, accessed 18 May 2026
Last reviewed: 2026-05-18