Autumn Budget 2025

Autumn Budget 2025

We have summarised the main points of the Budget below, along with a reminder of various changes from April 2026 that we were already aware of.

 

PENSIONS

 

Tax Free Cash from pensions

No change.

Tax Relief on Pension Contributions

No change.

Contribution Limits

No change.

Salary sacrifice

From April 2029, anyone sacrificing more than £2,000 per tax year for employer pension contributions won’t save national insurance (NI) on the excess. Employers will also pay NI on any excess.

Such contributions still receive income tax relief as they would if made via a different method such as relief at source.

GOV.UK : Changes to salary sacrifice for pensions from April 2029

Comment: We are disappointed to note this proposed change to pensions. The government revived the Pensions Commission on 21st July 2025 to examine why tomorrow’s pensioners are on track to be poorer than today’s pensioners and make recommendations for change (their words). This policy change would appear to conflict with that objective.

GOV.UK: Government revives landmark Pensions Commission

State pension

  • The triple lock means the new state pension and basic state pension are expected to increase by 4.8% in April 2026. This will mean a full new state pension figure of £241.30 per week and a full basic state pension of £184.90 per week. The government has committed to maintaining the triple lock for the duration of this Parliament.
  • Restrictions will be introduced on the making of Class 2 voluntary NI (VNICs) to achieve state pension for those living overseas by increasing the initial residency or contributions requirement for VNICs to 10 years. The government is also launching a wider review of VNICs, with a call for evidence to be published in the new year.
  • Changes will be made from 2027 to avoid those whose sole income is the state pension having to pay small amounts of income tax through Simple Assessment (which will become increasingly likely as the state pension increases and the personal allowance remains frozen). Further details from the government are to follow.

Pension Protection Fund / Financial Assistance Scheme

The government will introduce payment of inflation increases on pre-97 pensions to the Pension Protection Fund (PPF) and Financial Assistance Scheme (FAS) members of up to 2.5 per cent. This would apply to those members whose original schemes provided for indexation on pre-97 pensions. The move would broadly align pre-97 indexation rules with those already in place for post-97 pensions for PPF and FAS members.

INVESTMENTS

 

Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs)

From April 2027, changes will be made to the ISA allowance so that only the over 65s will be able to place the full £20,000 into Cash ISAs – those under 65 are capped at £12,000 into Cash ISAs with the balance having to be placed in other ISA types if they wish to make use of the full allowance.

The annual subscription limits all remain at their current levels in 2026/27, i.e.

  • £20,000 ISA
  • £4,000 Lifetime ISA
  • £9,000 Junior ISA (and Child Trust Fund)

Lifetime ISA

A consultation is to take place early next year on replacing the Lifetime ISA (LISA) with a new product for first time buyers.

Enterprise Investment Schemes (EIS) and Venture Capital Trusts (VCT)

Changes to be introduced in Finance Bill 2025-26 to take effect from 6 April 2026: 

  • The Income Tax relief that can be claimed by an individual investing in VCT to reduce to 20% from the current rate of 30%
  • The gross assets requirement that a company must not exceed for the EIS and VCT to increase to £30 million (from £15 million) immediately before the issue of the shares or securities, and £35 million (from £16 million) immediately after the issue
  • The annual investment limit that companies can raise to increase to £10 million (from £5 million) and for knowledge-intensive companies to £20 million (from £10 million)
  • The company’s lifetime investment limit to increase to £24 million (from £12 million) and for knowledge-intensive companies to £40 million (from £20 million)

The increases to the annual, lifetime and gross asset limits apply only to qualifying companies that are not registered in Northern Ireland trading in goods or the generation, transmission, distribution, supply, wholesale trade or cross-border exchange of electricity. These companies will remain eligible for the current scheme limits.

Enterprise Management Incentive (EMI) scheme

The measure will amend provisions for some of the limits relating to the EMI scheme. For eligible companies, the changes that will apply to EMI contracts granted on or after 6 April 2026 are the limit on:

  • Company options will be increased from £3 million to £6 million
  • Gross assets will be increased from £30 million to £120 million
  • The number of employees will be increased from 250 employees to 500 employees

TAXATION

 

 Income tax

Income tax bands in England, Wales and Northern Ireland have been frozen for a further three tax years to April 2031 (they had already been frozen to April 2028).

All income tax rates and bands remain at their current levels in 2026/27 apart from as outlined below.

Changes to tax rates for property, savings & dividend income

  • Tax on dividend income will increase by 2 percentage points. The ordinary rate will rise from 8.75% to 10.75%, and the upper rate from 33.75% to 35.75% from April 2026. The additional rate will remain unchanged at 39.35%. The £500 dividend allowance remains in place.
  • Tax on savings income will increase by 2 percentage points across all bands. The basic rate will rise from 20% to 22%, the higher rate from 40% to 42%, and the additional rate from 45% to 47% from April 2027. The starting rate band and personal savings allowance remain unchanged.
  • The government is creating separate tax rates for property income (any income from letting land and buildings). From April 2027, the property basic rate will be 22%, the property higher rate will be 42% and the property additional rate will be 47%. Finance cost relief will be provided at the separate property basic rate (22%). The £1,000 property allowance and Rent a Room Scheme remain in place.

The way individuals report and pay tax on property, savings and dividend income will remain the same – it is only the rates of tax charged that will change. The income tax ordering rules will be changed from April 2027 so that the Personal Allowance will be deducted against employment, trading or pension income first.

The changes to property income rates will apply in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The government will engage with the devolved governments of Scotland and Wales to provide them with the ability to set property income rates in line with their current income tax powers in their fiscal frameworks. The changes to dividend and savings income rates will apply UK-wide as these rates are reserved.

GOV.UK : Changes to tax rates for property, savings & dividend income

Tax and NI thresholds

  • No increases to the headline rates of income tax (see above regarding future rates for savings/dividend/property income), National Insurance contributions (NICs) or VAT
  • Income tax thresholds and the equivalent NICs thresholds for employees and self-employed frozen at current levels for a further three years from April 2028 to April 2031
  • NI Secondary Threshold frozen at its current level from April 2028 to April 2031
  • Plan 2 student loan repayment threshold will be frozen at its 2026/27 level for three years from April 2027

National Living Wage

National Living Wage will increase by 4.1% to £12.71 per hour for eligible workers aged 21 and over. 

Capital gains tax

The annual exemption remains at £3,000 (a maximum of £1,500 for discretionary/interest in possession trusts – shared between all settlor’s trusts subject to a minimum of £300 per trust).

CGT rates remain as they currently are:

  • 18% for any taxable gain that doesn’t fall above the basic rate band when added to income and 24% on any gain (or part of gain) that falls above the basic rate band when added to income
  • Unused personal allowance can’t be used for capital gains
  • Discretionary/interest in possession trustees and personal representatives pay at the higher rates (24%)

Inheritance tax (IHT)

  • In an improvement to the Business Relief (BR) and Agricultural Relief (AR) changes from next April, the £1 million limit on 100% Business and Agricultural Relief will be transferable between spouses if unused on first death (including where first death was before 6 April 2026).
  • Capping inheritance tax trust charges for former non-UK domicile residents – this measure introduces a cap on relevant property inheritance tax charges for trusts which held excluded property at 30 October 2024. The relevant property charges are capped at £5 million over each 10 year cycle.
  • Anti-avoidance measures for non-long-term UK residents and trusts – this measure will look-through non-UK companies or similar bodies to treat UK agricultural land and buildings as situated in the UK for inheritance tax purposes. It also provides that where a settlor ceases to be a long-term UK resident, there will be an Inheritance Tax charge if there is a later change in situs of their trust assets.

Also, the Inheritance Tax charity exemption will be restricted to gifts made directly to UK charities and registered clubs, and excluded from gifts to trusts which are not registered as UK charities or clubs.

IHT thresholds to be fixed at their current levels for one further tax year to April 2031, as shown below: 

  • Nil Rate Band (NRB) at £325,000
  • Residence Nil rate Band (RNRB) at £175,000
  • RNRB  taper, starting at £2 million
  • Combined £1 million allowance for 100% AR and BR relief

Previously announced changes

The government is implementing previously announced reforms to taxes on wealth and assets including:

  • From 6 April 2026, the CGT rate for Business Asset Disposal Relief and Investors’ Relief will increase to match the main lower rate at 18%
  • From 6 April 2026, the government will reform agricultural property relief and business property relief
  • From 6 April 2026, the government will introduce a revised tax regime for carried interest which sits wholly within the income tax framework
  • From 6 April 2027, the government is removing the opportunity for individuals to use pensions as a vehicle for IHT planning by bringing unspent pots into the scope of IHT

Internationally mobile individuals

The government is to make changes to the way internationally mobile individuals are taxed, closing loopholes and capping relevant property trust charges payable by certain trusts. Further details are to follow.

New mileage tax on electric cars

A new 3p charge per mile on electric cars.

Universal credit

The two-child benefit cap is to be abolished from April 2026.

Employee ownership trusts (EOT)

The 100% relief from capital gains tax on businesses sold to Employee Ownership Trusts will be reduced to 50%.

High value council tax surcharge HVCTS (‘Mansion tax’)

From April 2028, a council tax surcharge will apply to properties worth more than £2m in 2026. This will be £2,500 for properties worth £2m-£2.5m rising in bands to a maximum of £7,500 for homes valued at over £5m. Charges will increase in line with CPI inflation each year from 2029 onwards. Homeowners, rather than occupiers, will be liable to the surcharge and will continue to pay their existing Council Tax alongside the surcharge. 

GOV.UK : High Value Council Tax Surcharge

Stamp duty

From 27 November 2025, there is an exemption from the 0.5% Stamp Duty Reserve Tax (SDRT) charge on agreements to transfer securities of a company whose shares are newly listed on a UK regulated market.

The exemption will apply for a 3-year period from the listing of the company’s shares.

Tax Support for Entrepreneurs

A Call for Evidence has been published seeking views on the effectiveness of existing tax incentives, and the wider tax system, for business founders and scaling firms, and how the UK can better support these companies to start, scale and stay in the UK. The Call for Evidence will close on 28 February.

FURTHER UPDATES

HMRC will be issuing further tax related documents over the coming days providing further detail on today’s announcements.

NOTE

 

Any links to websites, other than those belonging to Stover Financial Planners Ltd, are provided for general information purposes only. We accept no responsibility for the content of these websites, nor do we guarantee their availability.

Any reference to legislation and tax is based on Stover Financial Planners Ltd’s understanding of United Kingdom law and HM Revenue & Customs practice at the date of production. These may be subject to change in the future.

Tax rates and reliefs may be altered. The value of tax reliefs to the investor depends on their financial circumstances. No guarantees are given regarding the effectiveness of any arrangements entered into on the basis of these comments.

YOUR OPPORTUNITY

 

 If you’ve not yet put in place a sound financial plan and you’d like to know more, please feel free to contact us on 01626 305318 or via email here.

The views expressed are not to be taken as financial advice. Professional advice should be sought before proceeding.

 

 

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