The Chancellor delivered her second Budget today as she sought to balance financial constraints and political ambitions without breaking manifesto promises. Expectations had already cooled in the lead up to the announcement, not least because several key measures appeared unexpectedly in an Office for Budget Responsibility release issued only minutes earlier. What followed this afternoon broadly aligned with that early glimpse: a Budget built around revenue stability, modest adjustments and further refinement of policies already set in motion.
For individuals, the most significant developments centre on the continued focus on personal taxation. Despite theoretically sticking to the Government's pre-election promise not to increase personal tax rates for working people, many of those very same workers will pay more income tax. The freeze on income tax and National Insurance Contributions thresholds has been extended again, this time to 2031, bringing more individuals into higher rates through fiscal drag rather than because they earn more in real terms. Added to this are targeted increases to taxes on dividend, savings and property income. These increases signal a sustained move towards broadening the tax base for non-labour income.
Inheritance tax continues to evolve following significant announcements at last year's Autumn Budget. In another example of fiscal drag, the Government has opted to extend the freeze on the nil-rate bands and the new £1 million cap on agricultural and business property reliefs for a further year, a development that will be closely watched by landowners and family businesses. At the same time, internationally mobile individuals face further changes, including the welcome introduction of a £5 million cap on inheritance tax trust charges for historic trusts created by non-doms, presumably in the hope of stemming the flow of wealthy long-term resident foreigners leaving the UK.
After weeks of speculation, the introduction of a higher-rate council tax charge for properties valued above £2 million marks a notable shift towards using annual property taxation rather than transaction taxes to raise revenue. In an attempt to reduce frictional costs for share issuers and investors, and improve the UK's appeal as a listing venue for successful companies, the Government has also introduced a new UK Listing Relief. This will provide a three-year exemption from Stamp Duty Reserve Tax on transfers of a company’s shares following its UK listing. In the pensions sphere, the decision to bring salary-sacrifice contributions above £2,000 within the scope of National Insurance represents a material structural shift. The change will require both employers and individuals to revisit how they structure retirement funding.
Many of the tax kites that had been flown in previous weeks were quietly brought down. While this Budget does not mark a dramatic change in direction, it does reinforce a clear intention to raise revenue steadily through a mixture of freezes, targeted base-broadening and a renewed focus on compliance. Whether this provides the stability the Chancellor is seeking remains to be seen. We consider the main announcements in more detail below.
The Government continues to publish policy documents and we will continue to update content as more information becomes available.
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