Former NSW govt's first-home buyer reforms stamped out

A signature reform of the Perrottet government targeting first-home buyers is likely headed for the scrap heap as the NSW Labor government secures support from key members of the cross bench.

Labor will introduced laws on Tuesday to increase exemptions on stamp duty or first-home buyers, up from a previous cap of $650,000 to $800,000, and allow concessions on homes up to $1 million.

The party will also scrap the former coalition government's reforms which gave first-home buyers a choice between paying up front stamp duty or a yearly land tax, on properties valued up to $1.5 million.

The government secured support from the Greens and independent MP Alex Greenwich, with the reforms likely to pass next week.

The government still requires support from two upper house crossbenchers.

"We would much rather people pay no tax, or a reduced amount, than a land tax forever," Premier Chris Minns said during question time on Tuesday.

Under the current scheme, more than half of the tax concessions were being given to the most well-off 13 per cent of first-time buyers, he said.

It meant the government was allocating close to two and half times more funds to those buying homes worth more than a million to those buying homes worth about $800,000, he said.

Just 16 per cent of those concessions went to regional NSW, the premier said.

Treasurer Daniel Mookhey says the former government's reforms would have saddled home owners with a rising tax that would last forever.

"We took a clear policy to the election and we got a mandate to take more first-home buyers out of the tax system altogether," Mr Mookhey told Sky News.

Some 4800 people have chosen the land tax since it passed the parliament late last year while more than 6000 had received a stamp duty waiver or reduced rate.

It comes six months after both cross benches, with a very similar make-up, passed the Perrottet government's reforms.

Greens spokeswoman Abigail Boyd says her party never endorsed the Perrottet government's stamp duty reforms, because it did little to address the state's housing affordability crisis.

"It was a bad idea back then, and six months on it's got no better," she told AAP.

Labor's bill would support people "doing it tough", offering concessions to people trying to buy homes under $1 million.

Shadow treasurer Damien Tudehope criticised Labor's proposal, saying it would eliminate choice for first-home buyers and put them "two years behind" in saving for stamp duty.

UNSW Professor of Housing Research Hal Pawson says there is little evidence the government's new scheme will help more people buy their own home.

"There really isn't any difference between stamp duty concessions and first-home buyer cash grants which ... are pretty widely understood to be inflationary," he told ABC Radio National.

"(It is) making the problem that they're trying to solve worse."

The Victorian government on Tuesday moved to abolish stamp duty for commercial properties, which Premier Daniel Andrews said would boost the economy by up to $50 billion.

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