BudgetMar 6 2024

Budget 2024: The Great British Tax Table

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Budget 2024: The Great British Tax Table
Jeremy Hunt poses with the red box on his way to Parliament today (March 6). (Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty)

Budget promises of tax cuts and support for Britons were the hallmark of chancellor Jeremy Hunt's last-ditch attempt to woo British voters ahead of the 2024 general election.

With more leaks than a water pipe that has remained cold due to the cost of living crisis, the Budget 2024 promised much but may end up delivering very little that Britons actually want. 

Once again there was no mention of raising the inheritance tax threshold, which has remained frozen at £325,000 for individuals since April 6 2009 and is expected to remain so until 2028 - long after Britain has gone to the polls and taken photos of their Doodles outside the station for social media.

Hunt made much of the widely-anticipated (because it was leaked to the press) 2p cut to national insurance.

The less-popular sequel to the Great British Bake Off, albeit just as crummy and overcomplicated. 

Lily Megson, policy director at My Pension Expert, said: “There will be millions of people across the UK celebrating the NI cuts. Around 27m of them, in fact.

"However, the savings are modest – the average UK salary is around £28,000, and someone earning that much stands to save less than £350 a year by cutting NI rates by 2p.

"And we mustn’t forget that the impact of the NI cuts are limited to those in work. Pensioners still fall through the cracks."

Those cracks are becoming wider than ever, something the Conservative party cannot refuse to acknowledge in this last Budget before the election. 

There was much hue and cry over the anticipated introduction of the Great British Isa - the less-popular sequel to the Great British Bake Off, albeit just as crummy and overcomplicated. 

The Isa regime has already been criticised for having too much choice and not enough simplicity, despite some tinkering in the 2023 Autumn Statement to tidy it up.

The hope is the additional £5,000 allowance may be attractive to enough Isa savers to help boost small businesses.

But Hunt also tipped a nod to income-hungry investors, with a New British Savings Bond, which will carry a fixed rate for three years. 

But with a few concessions to British business owners, who were watching to see who will be more business-friendly before they cast their vote, Hunt seems to have delivered a gilded balloon - full of air and incapable of withstanding sharp scrutiny.

Anyway here's the latest cut-out-and-keep-after-printing-responsibly tax table, which is what you really wanted, not my views on it: 

 2024 Budget2023 Autumn StatementBudget 2023
Income tax and personal allowancesAs anticipated, there will be a 2p cut in National Insurance.Abolishing Class 2 NICs for self-employed people, saving the average SE person £192 a year. Reducing Class 4 NICs by 1 per cent. Cut main rate of employee national insurance to 10%. Income tax bands remain frozen til 2027The lower rate is expected to come into force this April. The threshold of income at which qualifying carers begin paying tax on care income will be increased to £18,140 per year plus £375 to £450 per person cared for per week for 2023-24. Thresholds will then be index linked.
Dividend tax - Previously announced reductions to go ahead. 
Pension allowances-
Continued commitment to triple lock.
Commitment to the triple lock, meaning an extra £900 a year per person after April in 2024.No more lifetime allowance - it will be abolished completely in a future Finance Bill. Annual Allowance set to rise from £40,000 to £60,000.MPAA set to revert to £10,000 from £4,000. PCLS will be retained at £268,375 & frozen thereafter.
Capital gains taxReduce higher 28% CGT rate on residential property to 24%. 


 
-Tighter rules around disclosure of disposal of assets under conditional contracts to allow HMRC more time to assess tax due on capital gains.
Bank levy - 
Inheritance tax No reformsNo uplift for IHT thresholds; current freeze remains.
Corporation tax Honouring the commitment to help companies investing in the UK by making full expensing permanent.Corporation tax will still rise to 25% from 19% as planned but super deduction being replaced with "full capital expensing" for 3 years to try and support businesses.
Tax on savings interestIntroduction of the British Isa for an additional £5,000 annual investment on top of the existing £20,000 Isa allowance.

New British Savings Bond fixed rate for 3 years. 

 
Simplifying Isa regime, digitalising the reporting scheme and allowing the IFISA to invest in long-term asset funds and open-ended property. Subscription limits remain across the range. Fractional shares allowed.Maintaining limits on Isas.
National Insurance contributionEmployee NI cut by another 2% from 10 to 8 per cent; and self-employed cut by 2%, from 8% to 6%.Abolishing Class 2 National Insurance contributions for self-employed people, saving the average SE person £192 a year. Reducing Class 4 NICs by 1 per cent.- Commitments to help self-employed and lower earners
VATVAT registration threshold rises from £85,000 to £90,000 as of April 1.

Duty frozen again until February 2025.
Duty on alcohol frozen until August 1 2024. 
Stamp Duty Land TaxMultiple dwellings relief to be scrapped in June 2024.

 
Extending the growth market exemption, a relief from stamp duty and stamp duty reserve tax to include "smaller, innovative growth markets" in- January 2024. 
Environmental taxes and energy support for homeownersEnergy profits levy to be extended.Climate Change Levy - maintaining freeze. Reduced rates from one year from April 2025.The Energy Price Guarantee will be kept at £2,500 for an additional three months from April to June, saving a typical household £160. End to the energy premium paid by households who use pre-payment meters, which will save 4mn families £45 a year from July.
Business rates and RestartExtending the Recovery Loan Scheme and renaming it as the Growth Guarantee Scheme Freeze small business multiplier for a further year. Extend the 75 per cent business rates discount for retail, hospitality and leisure for another year.Enhanced credit for R&D of £27 for every £100 spent on R&D. Small businesses investment allowance increased to £1mn.
Entrepreneurs' relief (Business Asset Disposal Relief); R&D and R&D Expenditure Credit Merging R&D Expenditure Credit and SME schemes from April 2024. Reducing rate at which loss-making companies are taxed from 25% to 19%. 
Health and Social Care tax --
Residential Property Development Tax and Mortgage scheme. Government will extend the mortgage guarantee scheme for an additional 18 months until the end of June 2025.Pledge to implement Edinburgh reforms regarding real estate investment trusts. Extension to the mortgage guarantee scheme.
Employment Allowance relief More guidance expected to help self-employed 
IR35 Autumn Finance Bill 2023 will allow HMRC to reduce the pay-as-you-earn liability of a deemed employer to account for taxes paid by a worker and their intermediary on payments received, where an error has been made in applying the off-payroll working rules.As outlined in Hunt's turnaround Budget in October 22, there will now be no reversal of off-payroll working reforms introduced in 2017 and 2021. The original changes will go ahead as planned.
Childcare benefit

From April - high income CB threshold rises £50k to £60k and top of the taper threshold to £80k.

By 2026, high income CB charge will be based on household income rather than individual earnings.

Continuation of Budget pledgesChildcare support will come up-front. The limit on maximum support will rise after being frozen at £646 a month for years. The 30 hours' free childcare per week for 38 weeks support will be extended to one- and two-year-olds from September 2024.
Pushing people on Universal Credit back to work Mandating a work programme to help unemployed back to work; those who do not engage with this will have benefits stopped after six months.Strengthened work search requirements are expected to encourage over 700,000 lead carers of children on Universal Credit to look for work or increase their hours. The administrative Earnings Threshold will be increased from the equivalent of 15 to 18 hours of earnings at the National Living Wage for an individual claimant. The couples AET will be removed entirely. This is expected to ask over 100,000 additional claimants to meet more regularly with a Work Coach and take active steps to move into work or increase their earnings.
Tax Avoidance New powers to DWP to tackle fraud and error. Tougher consequences for promoters of tax avoidance schemes.Tougher measures to crack down on tax avoidance and tax avoidance schemes. The government will double the maximum sentences for the most egregious cases of tax fraud from 7 to 14 years.
Non-Dom and overseas taxation

Removal of the remittance basis for taxation, effectively scrapping the expatriate regime for non-UK domiciles.

Non-doms who've lived in UK for 12 years to pay £50,000 unless they invest in UK business as this can offset it.

--
Fuel Duty 5p cut extended again for another 12 months and no inflation-linked increase.Temporary 5p cut in fuel duty rates until April 1 2024.-
Household Support Scheme Extending the Household Support Fund with an extra £500m for a few more months.Household Support Fund to finish March 2024.-
Pension schemes DC pension schemes to be given the freedom to invest in more UK-based enterprises and infrastructure.