Autumn Budget 2024

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To Autumn Budget 2024, our newsletter designed to bring you tax tips and news to keep you one step ahead of the taxman.

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· Introduction’
· Inheritance Tax changes revealed’
· Increases in Capital Gains Tax rates’
· NI Employer Contributions (NICs) to rise next year’
· Employment Allowance more than doubles’
· Income Tax thresholds to rise again from 2028′
· Income Tax, VAT, and NI for employees remain the same’
· Corporation Tax to be capped for Parliamentary term’
· National Minimum Wage to increase’
· Reform to tax on Carried Interest’
· Stamp Duty goes up for second homes’
· VAT for Private Schools confirmed’
· DWP counter-fraud team expanded’
· Reforms to Business Rates’
· More compliance officers for HMRC’
· State Pension to rise’
· Non-Dom Tax Regime’
· Increase to Energy Profits Levy’
· Fuel Duty frozen’
· Air Passenger Duty to rise’

Introduction

Significant changes to Employers’ National Insurance Contributions, Capital Gains Tax and Inheritance Tax were among the headline announcements in today’s Budget.

It was clear from early in the speech that the total rise in taxes would be very substantial, with Chancellor Rachel Reeves saying the amount would be around £40bn. This would make it the second highest increase in taxes announced in one Budget on record, according to some early analysis.

But Ms Reeves, who was making history as the first female Chancellor in UK history to deliver a Budget, said that without bringing in these tax rises the country would instead face more ‘austerity’.

Aside from the headlines mentioned above, some of the other most significant announcements included:

– No rises in Income Tax or VAT
– No rise in Employee National Insurance Contributions
– Corporation Tax to be capped
– Employment Allowance to increase
– Reforms to rules for Carried interest
– 5,000 extra HMRC compliance staff
– Stamp Duty to increase on second homes
– Non-Dom tax regime to be scrapped
– Increases to National Minimum Wage

Below, we delve into more details.

Inheritance Tax changes revealed

There had been speculation aplenty about changes to Inheritance Tax (IHT), with many expecting this to be among the core announcements in terms of tax rises.

Some of the rumours around aspects of the rules like gifting didn’t materialise. In fact, gifting was not mentioned at all.

One key announcement on IHT was that thresholds will remain frozen until 2030. That’s two years further than the previous Government had already planned. The consequence of this is that IHT will, in effect, rise during that time.

One of the key changes was that inherited pension pots will be counted within IHT from April 2027. The Treasury stated: “This removes a distortion which has led to pensions being used as a tax planning vehicle to transfer wealth rather than their original purpose to fund retirement.”

The Budget papers stated that the Government will “bring unused pension funds and death benefits payable from a pension into a person’s estate for inheritance tax purposes from 6 April 2027. This will restore the principle that pensions should not be a vehicle for the accumulation of capital sums for the purposes of inheritance, as was the case prior to the 2015 pensions reforms.”

And, as had been rumoured in the media in recent weeks, Agricultural Property Relief and Business Property Relief will be cut from 6 April 2026. With what the Treasury called a new allowance, the first £1m of combined business and agricultural assets will continue to be free of IHT but for assets over that amount, it will apply with 50% relief.

The Treasury gave an example saying the allowance will cover a “combined £400,000 of agricultural property relief and £600,000 business property relief qualifying for 100% relief.

Ms Reeves also said the Government will apply a 50% relief, IHT for shares on the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) and other similar markets “in all circumstances”. She said this created an effective rate of tax of 20%.

However, some key elements of IHT will remain the same. The first £325,000 of any estate will still be tax-free – or £500,000 if the estate includes a residence passed to direct descendants. The inheritance tax nil-rate bands will stay fixed at these levels for a further two years until 5 April 2030.

The nil-rate band (currently £325,000) and the residence nil-rate band (£175,000) also remain the same. Furthermore, the residence nil-rate band taper will continue to start at £2 million. The “qualifying estate of a surviving spouse or civil partner can continue to pass on up to £1 million without an inheritance tax liability,” the Budget papers also stated.

Only 6% of estates will pay IHT this year, Ms Reeves said during her speech. According to a Treasury press release, published after the Budget, more than 90% of estates each year will not pay IHT under the new rules.

Increases in Capital Gains Tax rates

One of the hot topics in the months leading up to today’s Budget was Capital Gains Tax. Many different ideas were proposed by commentators and tax analysts on how it might change to raise extra revenue.

The predictions were right in the sense that we got a rise in the rates. The changes announced were more straightforward than some had imagined.

The key changes are:

– The main rates of CGT will increase to 18% and 24% respectively from today
– The lower rate increases from 10% to 18%
– The higher rate increases from 20% to 24%
– The Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) and Investors’ Relief (IR) rate rises to 14% from 6 April 2025 and to 18% from 6 April 2026

Residential property rates are not changing.

According to the official Budget papers, released after the speech, CGT is only paid by “fewer than 1% of adults each year.”

The Budget papers also explained: “Phasing in the BADR and IR rate increases demonstrates the government’s commitment to a predictable tax system.”

Ms Reeves said that the UK’s CGT rates would still be the lowest of any European G7 economy after her alterations. The OBR says the CGT changes will raise £2.5bn by the end of the forecast, she added.