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Welcome to the 2025 Autumn Budget Newsletter from Beatons Group

Chancellor raises £26 billion in Autumn Budget

Chancellor Rachel Reeves set out tax-raising measures worth up to £26 billion in the Autumn Budget.

The increases will be achieved through a range of measures, including extending the freeze on Income Tax thresholds for a further three years.

Ms Reeves also announced extra spending increasing to £11.3 billion in 2029/30, including an extra £9 billion on welfare.

Despite the uplift in spending, the Chancellor has more than doubled her fiscal headroom to around £22 billion, according to the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR).

The OBR overshadowed the Chancellor's speech with the accidental publication of its main measures prior to the Budget being announced in Parliament.

On Income Tax, the personal allowance, the higher rate threshold and additional rate threshold are frozen at £12,570, £50,270 and £125,140 respectively until 2030/31.

Taxes on property, dividend and savings income – which currently face no equivalent of National Insurance contributions (NICs) – will be increased by up to 2%.

From April 2029, the government will charge employee and employer NICs on any pension contributions made via salary sacrifice above £2,000 a year.

The Budget also halves Capital Gains Tax (CGT) relief for company owners selling their businesses to Employee Ownership Trusts from 100% to 50%.

In addition, the Budget introduced a High Value Council Tax Surcharge on homes worth more than £2 million, while protecting those on low incomes.

Individual Savings Accounts (ISAs) will be reformed from April 2027 when the annual cash limit will be set at £12,000, within the overall annual ISA limit of £20,000.

The Chancellor also took action to cut £150 off energy bills, freeze rail fares and end the two-child benefit cap.

The government is extending the 5p Fuel Duty cut until the end of August 2026, with rates then gradually returning to March 2022 levels by March 2027.

Ms Reeves said: 'I can tell you today that for every family we are keeping our promise to get energy bills down and cut the cost of living with £150 taken off the average household energy bill from April.

'Money off bills and in the pockets of working people. That is my choice.'

For a detailed overview of the 2025 Autumn Budget and what the measures mean for you and your business, visit our Autumn Budget summary.


WHAT THEY SAID

'These are my choices – the right choices for a fairer, a stronger and more secure Britain.'
Rachel Reeves, Chancellor of the Exchequer

'That smorgasbord of misery we have just heard . . . can be summed up in one sentence: Labour are hiking taxes to pay for welfare.'
Kemi Badenoch, Leader of the Conservative Party

'The government should be commended for protecting capital spending, boosting innovation, sticking with the corporate tax roadmap and hiring the planning officers business asked for.'
Rain Newton-Smith, Chief Executive of the Confederation of British Industry (CBI)

'Business will welcome support for youth employment, Stamp Duty relief, protection for capital spending, a reduction in business rates multipliers and some investment tax breaks.'
Shevaun Haviland, Director General of the British Chambers of Commerce (BCC)

'While the Chancellor has taken important steps today on SME training and the new jobs guarantee scheme, ministers must now bring forward pro-business, pro-growth policies.'
Tina McKenzie, Policy Chair at the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB)


IN THE NEWS

2025 Autumn Budget - the political reaction
Addressing the House of Commons, Chancellor Rachel Reeves used the 2025 Autumn Budget to freeze Income Tax and National Insurance (NI) thresholds for an extra three years beyond 2028; remove the two-child benefit cap from April 2026; and extend the 5p 'temporary' Fuel Duty cut on petrol and diesel until September 2026.
Click here for the full story

2025 Autumn Budget - the business reaction
Business groups have reacted to Chancellor Rachel Reeves' Autumn Budget speech.
Click here for the full story

2025 Autumn Budget - the economic picture
Within her Autumn Budget speech, Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced measures that will raise taxes by £26 billion in 2029/30, including a freeze on Income Tax and National Insurance (NI) thresholds beyond 2028 and a cap on the amount under-65s can put into Cash ISAs.
Click here for the full story