Sheffield council tax 2026/27
Council tax in Sheffield (Yorkshire and The Humber) is £2,510 a year at Band D for 2026/27, ranging from £1,673 at Band A to £5,020 at Band H. That is £118.64 (5%) above the England average Band D of £2,392, a Gera Council Tax Index of 105, ranked 89 of 296 English billing authorities. Source: MHCLG, 2026/27.
Source: Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026 to 2027 (MHCLG). As of . Updated annually · last updated .
Band D charge
£2,510
per year, 2026/27
Gera Council Tax Index
105
100 = England average
National Band D rank
89/296
1 = most expensive
Sheffield’s Band D council tax is £118.64 (5%) above the England average Band D of £2,392 (GCTI 105). It ranks 89 of 296 English billing authorities by Band D charge and 2 of 15 in Yorkshire and The Humber — among the more expensive half of English billing authorities, with 207 authorities charging less at Band D.
Sheffield council tax bands A–H, 2026/27
| Band | 1991 property value | Annual charge |
|---|---|---|
| Band A | Up to £40,000 | £1,673.44 |
| Band B | £40,001 – £52,000 | £1,952.35 |
| Band C | £52,001 – £68,000 | £2,231.25 |
| Band DREFERENCE | £68,001 – £88,000 | £2,510.16 |
| Band E | £88,001 – £120,000 | £3,067.97 |
| Band F | £120,001 – £160,000 | £3,625.79 |
| Band G | £160,001 – £320,000 | £4,183.60 |
| Band H | Over £320,000 | £5,020.32 |
*Per-month figure is the annual charge ÷ 12 (councils usually bill over 10 instalments, so monthly direct-debit amounts are higher). Bands A–H are derived from the real £2,510 Band D charge using the statutory proportions (A = 6/9 … H = 18/9), fixed by the Local Government Finance Act 1992. A parish precept, where one applies, is added on top. Source: Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026 to 2027 (MHCLG).
The average council tax per dwelling in Sheffield is £1,538 a year — lower than the £2,510 Band D charge because most homes sit below Band D and many households claim discounts (such as the 25% single-person discount). Source: MHCLG, 2026/27.
Sheffield council tax — FAQ
How much is council tax in Sheffield for 2026/27?
Sheffield's Band D council tax is £2,510 a year for 2026/27 — the total charge including the county, police, fire and any adult-social-care precepts. Bands run from £1,673 (Band A) to £5,020 (Band H). The average bill per dwelling in Sheffield is £1,538, which reflects the mix of property bands and any discounts. Source: MHCLG, 2026/27.
What are all the council tax bands in Sheffield?
For 2026/27 in Sheffield: Band A £1,673, Band B £1,952, Band C £2,231, Band D £2,510, Band E £3,068, Band F £3,626, Band G £4,184, Band H £5,020. These are derived from the real Band D charge using the statutory band proportions (A = 6/9 of Band D up to H = 18/9), fixed by the Local Government Finance Act 1992. A parish precept, where one applies, is added on top.
Is Sheffield council tax high compared to the rest of England?
Sheffield's Band D charge of £2,510 is £118.64 (5%) above the England average Band D of £2,392 — a Gera Council Tax Index of 105 (100 = the England average). It ranks 89 of 296 English billing authorities by Band D (rank 1 = the most expensive), putting it among the more expensive half of English billing authorities, and 2 of 15 in Yorkshire and The Humber. Source: MHCLG, 2026/27.
What is the average council tax bill per dwelling in Sheffield?
The average council tax per dwelling in Sheffield is £1,538 a year for 2026/27. This differs from the £2,510 Band D charge because it averages across every band of property and reflects discounts and exemptions (such as the 25% single-person discount). Source: MHCLG council tax statistics, 2026/27.
How can I lower my council tax bill in Sheffield?
Check you are in the right band (you can challenge your band with the Valuation Office Agency if comparable homes are in a lower band), claim the 25% single-person discount if you live alone, apply for Council Tax Support if you are on a low income, and check exemptions for students, severe mental impairment, and empty-property rules. Sheffield sets the local scheme; contact your council to apply.
Moving in Yorkshire and The Humber?
Council tax follows the property, not the person — so it pays to know the band before you move. When you do move, book a vetted GeraHome cleaner, removals team or handyman to make the new place ready.
Find vetted home help on GeraHomeGet UK home cost updates before they land
Honest UK council tax, water, energy and home-service cost guides, plus how-to-hire tips. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime. A Gera Services product.
Nearby in Yorkshire and The Humber
Method & sources
Per-band figures (A to H) are derived from the real total Band D charge using the band proportions fixed in law by the Local Government Finance Act 1992, s.5(1): A = 6/9, B = 7/9, C = 8/9, D = 9/9, E = 11/9, F = 13/9, G = 15/9, H = 18/9 of Band D. Every property in England is placed in one of these eight bands based on its 1 April 1991 value. This is a legal arithmetic transform of the published Band D charge, not estimated data. Your actual bill also reflects any parish precept for your specific parish and any discounts (for example the 25% single-person discount) or exemptions you qualify for.
The Gera Council Tax Index (GCTI) re-expresses each authority’s real 2026/27 Band D charge as a ratio to the England average Band D (£2,391.52), indexed so that 100 = the England average. GCTI = round(area Band D ÷ England Band D × 100). A GCTI of 110 means the Band D bill in that area is 10% above the England average; 92 means 8% below. The national rank orders all 296 English billing authorities by Band D charge (rank 1 = the highest). Both are pure, reproducible re-expressions of the published MHCLG figures shown on the page — anyone can recompute them.
Open Government Licence v3.0 (OGL v3). Source: Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026 to 2027 (MHCLG). These are the real published Band D charge and average per dwelling for Sheffield; per-band figures are a statutory arithmetic transform, not estimates. Your bill also reflects any parish precept and any discounts or exemptions you qualify for.