Council Tax Band Checker — Slough
Updated: March 2026
Slough's post-war trading estate development brought rapid housing growth. The town's proximity to Heathrow and London has driven further change, but council tax bands remain frozen at 1991 values.
Slough is in the South East region of England. Council tax bands in England were set based on property valuations from 1 April 1991. Many properties haven't been reassessed since, meaning thousands of Slough residents could be overpaying. With 85,000 residential properties in Slough, if yours is one band too high you may be overpaying around £233 every year.
£2,100
Band D Rate (2024/25)
85,000
Residential Properties
Council Tax in Slough at a Glance
Is Your Slough Council Tax Band Correct?
Our council tax band checker compares your property's band against neighbouring properties using official data from the Valuation Office Agency (VOA). Enter your postcode and select your property — within seconds, you'll see a case strength score from 0 to 10, showing whether your council tax band is likely wrong and how strong your evidence is. The higher the score, the stronger the case for a band reduction — and the higher your potential refund.
Your Quick Band Check is free, requires no sign-up, and takes less than 60 seconds. If the tool flags a potential issue, you can unlock your Full Intelligence Report from £4.99 — giving you the complete evidence behind your score, a downloadable PDF, and everything you need to understand your case.
Council Tax Bands Explained
Council tax bands in England are based on property values as of 1 April 1991. Properties are placed into one of eight bands, from Band A (the lowest) to Band H (the highest).
| Band | Property Value (1 April 1991) |
|---|---|
| Band A | Up to £40,000 |
| Band B | £40,001 – £52,000 |
| Band C | £52,001 – £68,000 |
| Band D | £68,001 – £88,000 |
| Band E | £88,001 – £120,000 |
| Band F | £120,001 – £160,000 |
| Band G | £160,001 – £320,000 |
| Band H | Over £320,000 |
You can look up the official council tax band for any property in Slough on the VOA's Check Your Council Tax Band service.
How to Challenge Your Council Tax Band in Slough
If our tool flags a potential issue with your band, you can unlock your Full Intelligence Report from £4.99 — giving you the complete evidence behind your score, a downloadable PDF, and everything you need to understand your case. For those ready to act, the Complete Challenge Bundle (£29.99) includes a pre-populated VOA challenge letter, PAD data request, step-by-step submission guide, and professional comparable analysis.
For a detailed walkthrough of the appeal process, read our full step-by-step guide.
Tribunal Appeal History in Slough
Our database of 15 Valuation Tribunal decisions for Slough (Slough Borough Council) shows that 6.7% of challenges resulted in a band reduction.
15
Total Decisions
1
Allowed
8
Dismissed
6.7%
Success Rate
Source: Valuation Tribunal for England public decision records. Includes all council tax band appeals for Slough Borough Council. 6 additional cases were withdrawn, adjourned, or had no recorded outcome.
Council Tax Band Checker FAQ — Slough
The most reliable indicator is whether neighbouring properties with similar characteristics are in a lower band. TaxBandCheck compares your property against official VOA data — enter your postcode to get a case strength score instantly.
Slough's Band D rate is £2,100 a year. A one-band reduction would save approximately £233 a year. Refunds are backdated to your move-in date, so a 5-year resident receiving a one-band reduction would typically claim back around £1,165 in total — with no time limit on backdating for existing residents.
Yes — submitting a challenge to the Valuation Office Agency is completely free. TaxBandCheck's Quick Band Check is also free. The Full Intelligence Report (from £4.99) gives you the full evidence pack if you want professional-grade documentation, but it's optional.
No. A successful challenge only affects your own band. Your neighbours’ bands are unaffected unless they choose to challenge separately.
VOA decisions typically take 2–6 months from submission. If the VOA rejects your challenge, you can escalate to the Valuation Tribunal for England (VTE) — a free, independent appeals body. The VTE has heard 15 appeals against Slough Borough Council historically; 1 resulted in band reductions (6.7% success rate).
The VOA requires evidence of comparable properties in a lower band with similar characteristics. Our Full Intelligence Report (£4.99) compiles this automatically from EPC records, Land Registry data, and VOA comparables.
