The Council Tax is a property and person based charge that results in one bill for each household. Paying the bill is normally the responsibility of the freehold or leasehold owner if he or she lives in the property as his or her main or only home and is over 18.
Then the responsibility falls to residents in the following order - statutory or secure tenants, people living there under a licence and other residents.
If the property is no-one’s main or only home, then the owner will normally be liable. This applies, for instance, in the case of second homes.
The owners would always be liable in the following circumstances:
Where more than one person has an interest in a property (joint owners, for instance), then both are said to be “jointly and severally liable”, which means that the bill can be sent to either or both of them and either can be held responsible for the full amount.
This applies to a husband and wife or common-law partnership even when only one of them owns the property and civil partners or those living together as civil partners. Students are not jointly or severally liable in cases where they live with non-students.
You can appeal to the Council if you consider that you are not liable to pay the Council Tax either because you consider that:
You cannot appeal against the Council Tax set by the Council.
You must continue to pay Council Tax until any appeal is decided. The bill will be adjusted if your appeal is successful.