Fixing the Fragmented Landscape of UK Council Tax Band Data

Despite the public importance of Council Tax bands, data access is a mess!

Council Tax bands are a fundamental part of local governance in the UK, directly affecting household budgets and local authority funding. However, accessing this data at scale reveals a surprisingly fragmented and opaque system, one that hinders transparency and usability for both individuals and organisations.

The Scope of the Challenge

The UK has 324 local authorities that set Council Tax rates. But these are further complicated by overlapping entities such as parish councils and combined authorities. As a result, there are over 92,800 unique Council Tax combinations across the UK.

At Doorda, we’ve undertaken the task of collecting, cleaning, and standardising this data into a single, structured dataset — covering every published residential tax band and precept rate in the UK.

How the Data Is Published — and Why That’s a Problem

Despite its public significance, Council Tax data is published inconsistently across authorities. The main challenges centre around:

IssueDescription
Inconsistent formatsData appears in spreadsheets, PDFs, or on fragmented webpages.
No publication at allSome councils publish no structured data, requiring FOI requests.
FOI rejectionsSome councils, like Malvern Hills, cite data “availability” on other platforms.
Legal limitationsThe VoA site allows only manual lookup and restricts automated/commercial use.

For example, the Valuation Office Agency (VoA) website permits only one-at-a-time address lookups. Its terms classify Council Tax band data as personal data under GDPR, restricting both automation and commercial reuse.

Outdated Valuation Thresholds

Council Tax bands are still based on property values that are decades out of date, creating a system disconnected from today’s housing market.

England – Tax Bands Based on 1991 Values
BandProperty Value
AUp to £40,000
B£40,001 to £52,000
C£52,001 to £68,000
D£68,001 to £88,000
E£88,001 to £120,000
F£120,001 to £160,000
G£160,001 to £320,000
HMore than £320,000
Wales – Tax Bands Based on 2003 Values
BandProperty Value
AUp to £44,000
B£44,001 to £65,000
C£65,001 to £91,000
D£91,001 to £123,000
E£123,001 to £162,000
F£162,001 to £223,000
G£223,001 to £324,000
H£324,001 to £424,000
IMore than £424,000
Scotland – Tax Bands Based on 1991 Values
BandProperty Value
AUp to £27,000
B£27,001 to £35,000
C£35,001 to £45,000
D£45,001 to £58,000
E£58,001 to £80,000
F£80,001 to £106,000
G£106,001 to £212,000
HMore than £212,000
Northern Ireland – A Different Approach

Northern Ireland uses a rateable value system instead of bands. The tax is calculated using a formula:

Annual Charge = Property Value × Poundage Rate

Example:
A £300,000 property in Antrim & Newtownabbey (poundage: 0.009136) pays £2,740.80 per year. Poundage Rates by Council Area

Council AreaPoundage (£)
Antrim & Newtownabbey0.009136
Ards and North Down0.009137
Armagh City, Banbridge & Craigavon0.010109
Belfast0.009098
Causeway Coast & Glens0.009804
Derry City & Strabane0.011112
Fermanagh & Omagh0.009265
Lisburn & Castlereagh0.0087
Mid & East Antrim0.010337
Mid Ulster0.009025
Newry, Mourne and Down0.009718

What We’ve Built at Doorda

We’ve created a unified UK-wide dataset of Council Tax bands and precept rates, now available through DoordaOnline. The dataset is:

  • Machine-readable
  • Consistently structured
  • Designed for commercial and analytical use
  • Covers England, Wales, and Scotland

Note: This dataset does not include specific band assignments for individual addresses. That information is still tightly restricted by agencies like the VoA.


What’s Next

Our next goal is to estimate current market values for UK residential properties and map those against historic band thresholds. This would:

  • Estimate the effective band for every address
  • Highlight outdated assessments
  • Enable new insights into geographic tax disparities

We aim to build a dataset that allows both private and public stakeholders to understand the real financial impact of valuation lags.


A Call for Transparency

Council Tax band data should be publicly available, clearly structured, and easy to access. Instead, it remains scattered, outdated, and legally constrained. Reform is long overdue.

People should not have to scrape PDFs, submit FOIs, or risk GDPR violations just to understand how they’re taxed.

We’ve done the groundwork to bring this data into the light. Now it’s time for public policy to follow suit — treating residential tax data as a civic resource, not a bureaucratic secret.

Explore the full dataset contact us to find out how tax band could help your organisation.