The personal allowances for the 2023/24 tax year were largely frozen once again, which creates what is known as ‘fiscal drag’ where more people are brought into higher tax brackets as a result when they receive pay rises. The one exception was the very highest rate of income tax at 45%, where the amount earned before hitting this level was reduced from £150,000 to £125,140 from April 6.
Help with energy bills extended
The Chancellor extended the Energy Price Guarantee to help keep households sheltered from some of the worst of the energy price rises we have seen in recent months. The guarantee has been kept at £2,500 and extended through April, May and June – taking us to the warmer summer months.
Despite energy prices being around 50% of the level forecast back in October, this measure is still worth around £160 to the typical household. The £2,500 cap is not the maximum an energy bill will hit, but it does cap the amount a typical energy bill will reach.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said: “We know people are worried about their bills rising in April, so to give people some peace of mind, we’re keeping the Energy Price Guarantee at its current level until the summer when gas prices are expected to fall.
“Continuing to hold down energy bills is part of our plan to help hardworking families with the cost of living and halve inflation this year.”
As Rishi Sunak said, the move has the double benefit of helping to drive down inflation, which was still in double figures in the 12 months to February at 10.4%, slightly up on the 10.1% we saw over the equivalent period in January. Economists had expected inflation to fall in February, so it came as something of a shock.
ISA Allowance frozen for 2023/24 but SEIS investment access rises
The annual Individual Savings Account (ISA) allowance was also frozen again for the 2023/24 tax year, leaving it at £20,000 for each person.
However, the amount that companies can access, and use, of the Seed Enterprise Investment Scheme (SEIS) is rising. The company investment limit will go from £150,000 to £250,000, while the limit at the date of share issue on a company’s gross assets will rise from £200,000 to £350,000. In addition, the limit of a company’s ‘new qualifying trade’ will go from two to three years for the 2023/24 tax year.
For investors, the annual limits on how much individuals can claim Capital Gains Tax and Income Tax re-investment reliefs will rise from £100,000 to £200,000.
There are also changes to Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs), which are designed to make them more competitive. For example, REITs have needed to hold at least three properties, but where one commercial property is worth more than £20m within the REIT, this requirement is removed from April. There is also a rule change for properties within REITs that are sold within three years of significant development. These properties have been seen as outside of the property rental business, but this rule is being amended, as are the rules for deducting tax from income distributions generated by a REIT property when they are paid to partnerships.
If you want to find out more about what other measures were introduced, removed or changed in the Budget, you can see details on the Gov.uk website.
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