East of England · England

Council tax band appeals in Great Yarmouth

If you own or rent a home in Great Yarmouth, your council tax bill depends on the band assigned to your property by the Valuation Office Agency — not by Great Yarmouth Council. Bands in England (A–H) were set from 1991 property values, and errors in that original valuation are still common today. About the VOA on GOV.UK.

Free check. See every band on your Great Yarmouth street in seconds.

01

Compare your Great Yarmouth band to your neighbours

We pull the live VOA record for every property on your street and neighbouring streets in Great Yarmouth, so you can see at a glance whether your home is banded higher than similar properties nearby.

02

Build the evidence pack the VOA expects

Our pack includes matched comparables, a 1991 valuation summary specific to your East of England area, and a draft challenge letter — the exact format the VOA and Valuation Tribunal work with.

03

Submit to the VOA (free) and wait for Great Yarmouth to reissue

You send the pack to the VOA directly — they charge nothing to review. If your band drops, Great Yarmouth Council automatically reissues your bill and refunds every year you were overpaying, usually back to when you moved in.

Who sets bands in England

In England, bands are still based on 1 April 1991 open-market values and are maintained by the Valuation Office Agency. Great Yarmouth Council issues the bill, but only the VOA can change the band. A successful challenge means Great Yarmouth reissues your bill and refunds any overpayment — often backdated to when you moved in.

Council tax band thresholds in Great Yarmouth

Every property in Great Yarmouth sits in one of eight bands (A–H), decided by its estimated market value on 1 April 1991. If your recent purchase price back-calculates to a lower band than the one you’re in, you have grounds to challenge.

Band1 April 1991 value
A£0 — £40,000
B£40,000 — £52,000
C£52,000 — £68,000
D£68,000 — £88,000
E£88,000 — £120,000
F£120,000 — £160,000
G£160,000 — £320,000
HOver £320,000

Around 4.1% of dwellings nationally are estimated to sit in the wrong band — the neighbours test is the fastest way to see if yours is one of them.

Great Yarmouth council tax band FAQs

Can I appeal my council tax band in Great Yarmouth?

Yes. Any council tax payer in Great Yarmouth can ask the VOA to review their band at no cost. There are two routes: a formal "proposal" (available within six months of moving in or after certain qualifying events) and an informal "band review" (available at any time). Our pack works for both, and the evidence is the same — a clear comparison against similar homes nearby.

How long does a Great Yarmouth band review take?

The VOA typically responds within 2–4 months. If they agree the band should change, Great Yarmouth Council is notified automatically and issues a corrected bill plus any refund — usually within a further 4–8 weeks. If the VOA disagrees, you can escalate to the Valuation Tribunal free of charge.

Will Great Yarmouth Council refund overpaid council tax?

Yes — refunds are backdated to the date the incorrect band took effect, which is usually the date you moved in (and in some cases as far back as 1991). The refund is issued by Great Yarmouth Council directly, not by the VOA, once they receive the updated banding notice.

Band thresholds and comparable-property data for Great Yarmouth last reviewed .