For 155 years, England taxed people's windows. Homeowners bricked them up. The result was dark, damp, unventilated homes β and outbreaks of typhus, cholera, and smallpox that critics called "a tax on health."
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Infectious Diseases in Focus βIn 1696, the English government introduced one of the stranger fiscal instruments in the history of taxation: a tax on windows. The more windows a house had, the more its occupants paid. It lasted 155 years. And its unintended public health consequences β dark, airless homes that became incubators for typhus, cholera, and smallpox β offer a lesson that remains relevant to how we think about policy, housing, and disease to this day.
King William III needed revenue β specifically, to fund England's ongoing continental wars. Taxing income directly was politically toxic; it felt invasive and was widely resented. The solution, proposed by his ministers, was a proxy tax on visible wealth.
The logic was straightforward: wealthy people lived in larger, grander houses. Larger, grander houses had more windows β because glass was expensive, and a well-windowed facade was a conspicuous display of prosperity. Tax the windows, and you were effectively taxing wealth without requiring anyone to declare their income or submit to official scrutiny of their finances.
The initial structure was tiered. Houses with fewer than ten windows paid a flat rate. Those with more paid progressively higher rates. At the upper brackets β 25 windows or more β the tax was substantial.
The response of homeowners across England was immediate and entirely predictable in retrospect: they reduced their taxable window count by blocking their windows.
Bricks, boards, and plaster were used to seal window openings that had previously admitted light and air into homes. In some cases, the original window frames remained in place behind the blocking material; in others, the openings were completely filled. New houses were sometimes built from the outset with as few windows as possible, their facades reflecting not the tastes of their occupants but the calculations of their tax liability.
The phrase daylight robbery β still used in English to describe a transaction that is outrageously unfair β is thought by some historians and etymologists to have originated as a popular reference to the Window Tax itself: the literal robbery of daylight from people's homes by government decree. The etymology is debated, but the metaphor fits the history perfectly.
When windows are sealed, two things are lost that are, from an infectious disease perspective, genuinely important for health: sunlight and ventilation.
Sunlight β specifically ultraviolet radiation β has direct antimicrobial properties. UV-B radiation damages the DNA of bacteria and viruses on surfaces, reducing their viability. This effect was not understood in mechanistic terms in 1696; germ theory would not be established for another two centuries. But the empirical observation that dark, enclosed environments were associated with higher rates of illness was well established in medical thinking long before the mechanism was identified.
Ventilation β the movement of air through a building β serves multiple public health functions. It dilutes airborne pathogens, reducing the concentration of infectious particles in shared indoor air. It removes moisture, preventing the accumulation of damp that supports mold growth and the survival of certain bacteria. And it reduces the surface temperatures that allow some pathogens to persist on environmental surfaces.
Without both, homes became what we would now recognize as high-risk environments for infectious disease transmission.
Typhus β caused by Rickettsia prowazekii and transmitted by body lice β was the disease most directly associated with the conditions the Window Tax created. Lice thrive in crowded, unwashed conditions where clothing cannot be regularly laundered or dried. Dark, damp, unventilated rooms with no airflow and no sunlight were ideal environments for louse survival and transmission between household members. Physicians of the era consistently noted the association between typhus and airless, lightless housing.
The most directly documented connection between the Window Tax and disease came from Carlisle, England, in 1781. A severe typhus outbreak struck the city, killing dozens of residents. Investigators tracing the outbreak's origin identified a specific household where nearly every window had been bricked up to minimize the family's tax burden. The air inside the house had become so stagnant, and the conditions so favorable for louse transmission and proliferation, that typhus spread rapidly through the household and then into the surrounding community. The case was cited by reformers in subsequent decades as direct evidence that the Window Tax had public health consequences.
Cholera β which in the 18th and 19th centuries spread through contaminated water and environments β thrived in the damp, poorly maintained conditions that poor ventilation created. Smallpox, transmitted through respiratory droplets and close contact, spread more readily in enclosed, unventilated spaces where infected individuals shared recycled air with susceptible household members for extended periods.
Poor families suffered the most. They were already living in cramped, overcrowded conditions with multiple people sharing small spaces β and the Window Tax gave them a direct financial incentive to make those conditions worse. The wealthier classes, who could afford to pay the tax or who lived in houses large enough that blocking some windows still left adequate light and air, were less severely affected.
Despite mounting evidence of harm β and despite sustained popular opposition β the Window Tax proved remarkably durable. It survived regime changes, industrialization, urbanization, and repeated public health crises. It was amended and modified over 155 years, but never repealed until 1851.
The campaign for repeal drew on multiple sources of opposition. Reformers and physicians documented the health consequences in petitions and pamphlets. Architects and housing reformers argued that the tax was distorting building design in ways that had lasting structural consequences. Writers helped bring the issue to popular attention β Charles Dickens referenced the effects of dark, airless housing in ways that resonated with his large readership.
The tax was finally repealed in England in 1851. The response was enthusiastic: homeowners across the country began removing the bricks from sealed windows, reopening openings that had been blocked for generations, and letting light and air back into homes that had been sealed since the late 17th century.
In France, the equivalent tax lasted considerably longer. The contribution fonciΓ¨re des propriΓ©tΓ©s bΓ’ties β which included a levy on windows and doors β remained in various forms until 1926, nearly three decades into the 20th century. By that point, germ theory had been established for half a century, the role of ventilation and sunlight in disease prevention was scientifically understood, and the irony of a government maintaining a tax that incentivized behaviors known to promote disease spread was not lost on observers.
The Window Tax is a study in unintended consequences β in how a policy designed to solve one problem (raise revenue) created a different and more insidious problem (poor housing conditions that promoted disease) by changing behavior in ways that its architects did not anticipate.
It is also a study in who bears the cost of bad policy. The wealthiest households could absorb the tax, or could afford to keep enough windows open that their living conditions remained tolerable. The poorest households responded to the financial incentive the tax created by making their already difficult circumstances worse β sealing out the light and air that protected them from the diseases that were most likely to kill them.
The next time you open a window β to let in fresh air on a summer morning, or to bring sunlight into a room β remember that this simple act was once taxed for 155 years in England. And that the people who couldn't afford that tax paid for it with their health.