Council tax in shared houses causes more confusion than almost any other household bill. The rules differ depending on your tenancy type, whether students are involved, and whether the landlord is liable rather than tenants. Here’s a clear guide.
Who is Liable for Council Tax?
The law sets a strict hierarchy of liability for who is responsible for council tax:
| Position | Person liable |
|---|---|
| 1st | Resident owner-occupier |
| 2nd | Resident tenant with leasehold interest |
| 3rd | Licensee (licence to occupy rather than tenancy) |
| 4th | Resident with no legal interest (e.g. squatter) |
| 5th | Non-resident owner |
The key question for shared houses is: do tenants have a joint tenancy (all named on one agreement) or individual tenancies (each person has their own agreement for their room)?
Joint Tenancy vs Individual Tenancies
Joint Tenancy (all names on one agreement)
| Situation | Who pays |
|---|---|
| All joint tenants are adults | Any joint tenant — usually split between all |
| The council can pursue any one tenant for the full amount | Yes — joint and several liability |
| Discounts available | Single occupancy if only one non-disregarded person lives there |
Most purpose-built shared student houses and many professional house shares operate as joint tenancies. Any of the tenants can be held responsible for the whole bill.
House in Multiple Occupation (HMO) — Individual Room Lettings
In a true HMO where each tenant has their own separate licence or tenancy agreement for their room:
- The property falls to the 5th level of liability in the hierarchy
- The landlord (as non-resident owner) is liable for council tax
- Tenants do NOT pay council tax individually
Important: If the landlord is paying council tax on an HMO, they typically include an element in the rent. Tenants in these properties should not receive a council tax bill in their own name.
Council Tax and Students
Full Student Household
If every resident is a full-time student (undergraduate or postgraduate, but not part-time), the property is completely exempt from council tax.
To qualify:
- Each student must provide a council tax exemption certificate from their university
- The university issues these automatically but may need to be chased
- The exemption covers the whole property — bill = £0
Mixed Student/Non-Student Household
If the household contains both students and non-students:
- Students are disregarded (ignored) when counting occupants
- Non-students pay as if only non-students live there
- If only one non-student lives in the house with multiple students → they pay at the single occupancy (25% off) rate
Example — 4-bedroom house with 3 students and 1 working professional:
| Without student disregard | With student disregard |
|---|---|
| 4 people = no discount | 1 liable person = 25% single occupancy discount |
| Full council tax payable | Reduced by 25% |
Apply for the discount at your local council — it’s not automatic.
Disregarded Persons (Always Ignored in Count)
The following residents are always disregarded when assessing how many people live in a property:
| Person | Condition |
|---|---|
| Full-time student | Must be in qualifying course |
| Under 18 | Always |
| Student nurse | Specific NHS-funded courses |
| Youth training scheme trainees | Certain schemes |
| Severely mentally impaired adults | Medical certification required |
| Foreign language assistants | British Council placements |
| Care workers in specific roles | Low-paid, not immediate family |
| Diplomats | Specific status required |
If everyone in the property is disregarded, the property gets a full exemption.
Single Occupancy Discount (25% Off)
You qualify for a 25% reduction if you’re the only person liable for council tax. This applies when:
- You live alone
- All other residents are disregarded (e.g. full-time students, under-18s)
Apply directly to your local council — it’s not applied automatically. You’ll need to confirm your circumstances and may need to provide evidence.
Council Tax Bands in Shared Houses
Properties are assessed as a whole unit regardless of how many people share them. A 5-bedroom shared house is valued as a whole property and given a band (A–H in England and Scotland, A–I in Wales) based on its value in April 1991.
Individual rooms are not separately assessed for council tax (though this is different from business rates in some commercial scenarios).
Average council tax bills by band (England 2026/27):
| Band | Value at April 1991 | Approx. annual bill |
|---|---|---|
| A | Up to £40,000 | ~£1,200 |
| B | £40,001–£52,000 | ~£1,400 |
| C | £52,001–£68,000 | ~£1,600 |
| D | £68,001–£88,000 | ~£1,800 |
| E | £88,001–£120,000 | ~£2,200 |
| F | £120,001–£160,000 | ~£2,600 |
These are averages — actual bills vary by local authority.
Empty Property Rules
| Situation | Council tax |
|---|---|
| Property vacant up to 1 month (furnished) | Full council tax |
| Property vacant, unfurnished (“exempt”) | Council discretion — often exempt 1–3 months |
| Vacant 1–2 years | Full council tax (some councils charge 50% premium) |
| Vacant 2–5 years | Up to 100% premium (200% of normal bill) |
| Vacant 5–10 years | Up to 200% premium (300% of normal bill) |
| Vacant over 10 years | Up to 300% premium (400% of normal bill) |
Councils have discretion on exact charges within these maximums. Empty properties that are actively being renovated may qualify for an exemption in some areas.
Holiday and Second Homes
Second homes that are substantially furnished but not anyone’s main residence may be charged:
- Up to 200% of normal council tax (from April 2025 in England)
- Separate rules apply in Wales, where councils can charge up to 300% for second homes