Band G council tax cost 2026/27
England Band G average is around £3,987 a year, or about £332 per month over 12 months or £399 per month on the standard 10-month schedule. Band G is exactly 67 per cent above Band D by statute.
What Band G means in 2026/27
Band G is the seventh of the eight English valuation bands and contains every domestic property that was worth between £160,001 and £320,000 on 1 April 1991. The valuation bracket at Band G is unusually wide compared with the lower bands: most other bands cover a narrow range of around £16,000 to £40,000, but Band G covers a £160,000 spread. The reason is that the original system was designed to put a comparatively narrow tail of expensive properties into Band G and only the very most expensive into Band H.
Around 5 per cent of English dwellings sit in Band G. The share is much higher in expensive suburbs in the South East and the wealthier London boroughs, and much lower in former industrial areas. In Wales the equivalent band uses different value brackets because Wales rebanded on 1 April 2003.
The national average for Band G in 2026/27 is £3,987 per year, calculated as fifteen-ninths of the Band D national average of £2,392. The fifteen-ninths ratio is fixed in Schedule 1A of the Local Government Finance Act 1992. A council that sets Band D at £1,800 is therefore automatically setting Band G at £3,000 in the same council. That 67 per cent step is identical in every English billing authority.
Per-council range
The cheapest Band G in England for 2026/27 is in Westminster at around £1,618, and the dearest is in Rutland at around £4,230. The £2,612 cash gap between two identical Band G properties is the largest of any band other than Band H. The cause is the same as for every band: London inner boroughs have a strong business-rate base and substantial GLA precept, while small rural unitaries have a smaller resident tax base.
Top 5 cheapest Band G, England
Lowest band G- 1£1,618WestminsterLondon, Band D £971
- 2£1,633WandsworthLondon, Band D £980
- 3£1,880City of LondonLondon, Band D £1,128
- 4£2,173Hammersmith and FulhamLondon, Band D £1,304
- 5£2,635Tower HamletsLondon, Band D £1,581
Top 5 dearest Band G, England
Highest band G- 1£4,230RutlandEast Midlands, Band D £2,538
- 2£4,202NottinghamEast Midlands, Band D £2,521
- 3£4,175DorsetSouth West, Band D £2,505
- 4£4,137LewesSouth East, Band D £2,482
- 5£4,128North NorthamptonshireEast Midlands, Band D £2,477
What is in a Band G bill
For a typical upper-tier council outside London, a Band G household's £3,987 splits roughly into £3,035 for the council itself including the adult social care precept, £383 for the police and crime commissioner, £142 for the fire authority, and around £427 for a parish or town council where one exists. The breakdown is shown on the demand notice that arrives in early March, and councils have a statutory duty to provide a leaflet explaining each line.
In London the precept structure is different. There is no separate police or fire line: the Metropolitan Police, the London Fire Brigade and Transport for London are all funded through the Greater London Authority precept. A London Band G bill will typically show one council line and one GLA precept line, plus any service charge for the borough's elected mayor if it operates one.
The 10-month versus 12-month decision
On a Band G bill the cash-flow difference between schedules is substantial: £399 a month over ten months versus £332 a month over twelve. The total is identical either way. Many Band G households take advantage of the optional twelve-month schedule. The right to twelve instalments was clarified by the Council Tax (Administration and Enforcement) (Amendment) (No. 2) (England) Regulations 2012.
Some Band G households also pay in a single annual lump sum. A few councils offer a small annual discount of £5 to £10 for paying by direct debit but none offer a discount for paying annually. The cash-flow simplicity is the main draw. Direct debit on either schedule is the most reliable way to avoid missed payments and the enforcement cascade that follows them.
Band G and the 2026/27 uplift
For 2026/27 the standard referendum threshold was 4.99 per cent: 2.99 per cent core council tax and 2 per cent adult social care precept for upper-tier authorities. The vast majority of councils raised by the maximum, which added approximately £186 to a Band G bill compared with the 2025/26 average of around £3,801. A handful of councils granted exceptional financial support to raise by more added correspondingly larger amounts. The full settlement is in the Local Government Finance Policy Statement 2026 to 2027.
Discounts and reductions for Band G households
On a Band G bill the absolute cash value of a successful discount is large. A 25 per cent single occupant discount converts £3,987 to £2,990, saving £997 a year against the national average. A severe mental impairment disregard can have the same effect or, in households where both adults qualify, reduce the bill to zero. On a Band G bill a six-year back-claim can return £6,000 or more depending on the council's back-claim window.
The disabled-band reduction is particularly worthwhile at Band G. A Band G property qualifying for the reduction is billed as a Band F property, which is roughly £532 lower against the national averages. The reduction requires an additional room used predominantly by a permanently disabled resident, an additional bathroom or kitchen used by them, or wheelchair space inside the property. Councils require evidence and may inspect.
Council Tax Reduction is means-tested and run by each council under its own rules for working-age claimants. Band G households are less likely to qualify than smaller bands on income grounds, but pension-age households retain the more generous national framework that is worth checking. A full CTR award removes the entire Band G liability.
Band G and the property side
A typical Band G property is a substantial detached on a desirable suburban estate, a five or six-bedroom home in the commuter belt, or a converted period mansion. The band was set using the property's estimated value at 1 April 1991, which is now well over thirty years out of date. The Valuation Office Agency does not re-band on sale unless a material change has happened, so identical homes can sit in different bands if one was reassessed after an extension and the other was not. For the property side and per-council valuation lookups, see counciltaxbands.com on Band G.
Band G challenges are riskier than at the lower bands. The pool of clearly comparable evidence is smaller and the consequence of a successful re-banding upward to Band H is larger. Where you have a genuine case (for example, comparable detached homes on your street are all in Band F), the Valuation Office Agency's recent statistics show roughly 27 per cent of formal proposals succeed in lowering the band. The risk of a move upward is about 0.08 per cent. See how to challenge your council tax band for the walkthrough.
If you cannot pay a Band G bill
A £399 monthly Band G bill can become unaffordable after a change in circumstances. The most important step is to contact the council early. Most authorities will agree a revised payment plan, defer instalments, or signpost the discretionary hardship fund and the section 13A discretionary reduction. Ignoring the bill triggers a reminder, then a final notice that withdraws the right to pay by instalments, then a summons to magistrates' court with around £70 to £100 in costs added, then a liability order, then enforcement action with fees of up to £420 added under the Taking Control of Goods (Fees) Regulations 2014. The full enforcement sequence is at how to pay (and what happens if you do not).
Frequently asked questions
What does Band G council tax cost per month in 2026/27?
Where does Band G sit in the band ladder?
What kind of property is typically in Band G?
What is the difference between Band G and Band H?
Can a Band G property get the disabled-band reduction?
How has Band G changed compared with 2025/26?
Related cost pages
See costs for Band F, Band H, the reference Band D, or the entry-level Band A. Use the calculator for your specific council. For valuation rules see counciltaxbands.com.
Not legal or financial advice. For your exact bill, contact your local council. For independent help, contact Citizens Advice.