England London

Harrow Council Tax 2026

London, England

According to MHCLG, Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026-27, Harrow's Band D Council Tax is £2,511.07 for 2026-27, the 91st highest of 350 UK billing authorities (higher than 74% of them) and 7% above the UK average of £2,337.00.

£2,511.07
Band D charge · 2026 statutory
Above the UK average
+4.81%
year-on-year vs £2,395.86
Near the referendum cap
+7.4%
vs UK avg £2,337.00
£5,022.14
Band H · 18/9 of Band D
vs UK Band D distribution 83.7%

£2,511.07 on a £0-£3,000 axis

Harrow bands A-H schedule

Per-band charge 2026

Band A1674.05Band B1953.05Band C2232.06Band D2511.07Band E3069.09Band F3627.1Band G4185.12Band H5022.14

Where Harrow sits in the UK Band D distribution

All 350 billing authorities by Band D charge, 2026-27 (£200 bands)

0 30 60 90 120 150 180 £1.0k £1.2k £1.4k £1.6k £1.8k £2.0k £2.2k £2.4k £2.6k 2 1 8 25 5 23 98 153 35

Most UK councils set Band D near £2.4k–£2.6k. Harrow, at £2,511.07, falls in the highlighted band, higher than 74% of the 350 authorities.

Harrow · Council Tax picture · 2026

According to MHCLG, Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026-27, Harrow's Band D Council Tax for 2026-27 is £2,511.07, the 91st highest of 350 UK billing authorities. Band A payers owe £1,674.05 (6/9 of Band D); Band H payers owe £5,022.14 (18/9 of Band D). Harrow is a billing authority in England (London region), covering properties valued £68,001 to £88,000 at the 1991 valuation reference date. Single-occupier households receive a statutory 25% discount. See our methodology for full source lineage.

£2,511.07
Band D charge 2026-27
91st
of 350 UK billing authorities
7%
above UK average (£2,337.00)
+4.81%
year-on-year from £2,395.86

The annual Band D charge applies to properties valued £68,001 to £88,000 at the 1991 valuation reference date. Bands below D pay a proportionally lower share: Band A is charged at 6/9 (67%) of Band D. Bands above D pay proportionally more: Band H is charged at 18/9 (200%) of Band D. Single-occupier households receive a statutory 25% discount on the calculated charge; full-time students and certain other groups may be disregarded entirely, reducing the liable-adult count and potentially the band-multiplier calculation. For most households the Band D figure is the single most important number on the bill; every other band's charge derives from it through the statutory multiplier table set out in Schedule 2 of the Local Government Finance Act 1992.

Within a typical Council Tax bill, the headline figure aggregates precepting authorities: the principal billing authority, any parish or town council precept, the police and crime commissioner precept, and the fire authority precept where applicable. These are statutorily separated but collected together on the same demand notice for administrative simplicity. If you believe your property has been assigned to the wrong band, the Valuation Office Agency (England and Wales) or the Scottish Assessors (Scotland) handle formal band review applications at no charge. See our band challenge guide for evidence requirements and the statutory review timeline.

Derived from Harrow's published Band D rate (MHCLG, Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026-27) multiplied by statutory band ratios per the Local Government Finance Act 1992.

Band A–H charge table (2026/2027)

Band 1991 Valuation Range Annual Charge Monthly Sole occupant (−25%)
A Up to £40,000 (1991 valuation) £1,674.05 £167.41 £1,255.54
B £40,001 to £52,000 £1,953.05 £195.31 £1,464.79
C £52,001 to £68,000 £2,232.06 £223.21 £1,674.05
D £68,001 to £88,000 (reference band) £2,511.07 £251.11 £1,883.30
E £88,001 to £120,000 £3,069.09 £306.91 £2,301.82
F £120,001 to £160,000 £3,627.10 £362.71 £2,720.33
G £160,001 to £320,000 £4,185.12 £418.51 £3,138.84
H Over £320,000 £5,022.14 £502.21 £3,766.61

Source: MHCLG, Council Tax levels set by local authorities in England 2026-27 (area Band D) + Valuation Office Agency band ratios. Monthly figure is the annual charge / 10 (most councils use 10 monthly instalments). The sole-occupant column applies the statutory 25% single-person discount, payable when only one adult lives in the property.

Year-on-year context

Harrow raised its Band D charge by 4.81% this year (£2,395.86 → £2,511.07). Under the Local Government Finance Act 2012, English billing authorities are statutorily capped at a 2.99% increase for the main council element + a 2% adult social care precept (5% combined). This council's increase reflects the full statutory headroom plus any precepting-authority components (police, fire, mayoral) added on top.

How Harrow compares in London

Among the 33 billing authorities in London, Harrow's 2026-27 Band D charge of £2,511.07 ranks 3rd of 33 (£421.07 above the London average of £2,090.00). Its nearest-charged neighbours in the region:

Region rankCouncilBand D 2026-27
1st Kingston upon Thames £2,609.20
2nd Croydon £2,599.91
3rd Harrow £2,511.07
4th Richmond upon Thames £2,486.10
5th Havering £2,424.66

Regional rank out of 33 London billing authorities by 2026-27 Band D charge (1 = dearest). See the full UK ranking or the complete directory.

What you can do

Frequently asked questions

How is my Council Tax band assigned?

Bands are assigned by the Valuation Office Agency based on the property's open-market value at 1 April 1991 (England and Scotland) or 1 April 2003 (Wales). The band does not normally change unless the property is altered or sold and the VOA re-assesses it.

Can I challenge my band if I believe it is wrong?

Yes. You can ask the VOA to review the band if there is reason to believe the original valuation is incorrect (for example, comparable properties on the same street are in lower bands). See our band-challenge guide for the formal procedure and evidence requirements.

What discounts and exemptions apply?

Common reductions include the 25% single-person discount, the student exemption, the severely-mentally-impaired exemption, disabled-band-reduction, and the empty-property exemption. See our discounts guide for the full list and eligibility criteria.

What happens if I cannot pay?

If you cannot pay your Council Tax, contact Harrow immediately, they may agree a payment plan, recalculate your liability, or refer you to the Council Tax Support / Council Tax Reduction Scheme. Ignoring the bill leads to a summons and ultimately enforcement action. See our payment-difficulty guide.

Disclaimer

Council Tax charges shown on this page are derived from publicly-published billing-authority schedules and the Valuation Office Agency Council Tax list. They are intended as informational guidance, not as a personalised tax statement or legal advice. Your actual bill depends on your property's assigned band, any precepting-authority components in your area (police, fire, mayoral, parish), and any discounts or exemptions that apply to your household. For a binding figure consult your Harrow Council Tax bill or the official gov.uk Council Tax service. Figures published in 2026 reflect the 2026/2027 financial year only.