Budget, PAYE, Tax

NIC Changes

Employers’ class 1 NIC

The secondary class 1 NIC rates and thresholds (paid by employers) were not altered in the Spring Statement, and the rate is increasing from 13.8% to 15.05% on 6 April 2022. 

For 2022/23 the various secondary class 1 NIC thresholds are:

  Secondary class 1 NIC Thresholds
For most employees the employer pays at 15.05% on wages:
Per week:£175
Per month:£758
Per year:£9,100
If the employee is an apprentice or aged under 21 employer pays class 1 NIC at 15.05% on wages above:
Per week:£967
Per month:£4,189
Per year:£50,270
For new employees working at least 60% of their time in a Freeport site the employer can claim relief from class 1 NIC on wages up to: 
Per week:£481
Per month:£2,083
Per year:£25,000

Employees’ class 1 NIC 

The rates of primary class 1 NIC paid by employees are increasing on 6 April 2022 from 12% to 13.25% and from 2% to 3.25% for the upper rate.

The lower earnings limit (LEL) has not been changed from the proposed level for 2022/23, which will be: £123 per week, £533 per month, £6,396 per year. On earnings between the LEL and the primary threshold, the employee pays class NIC at 0%, thus receives NIC credit for those wages.

The upper earnings limit (UEL) has also not been changed by the Spring Statement, and will stay at the proposed thresholds for 2022/23 of £967 per week, £4,189 per month, £50,270 per year. On earnings above the UEL, the employee will pay class 1 NIC at 3.35% for 2022/23.

The complication introduced by the Spring Statement is that the primary threshold (PT) for class 1 NIC will change part way through the tax year on 6 July 2022. The employee will pay class 1 NIC at 13.25% on earnings between the LEL and the PT for 2022/23.  

Class 1 NIC primary thresholds 6 April to 5 July 2022 6 July 2022 to 5 April 2023 
Per week£190£242
Per month£823£1048
Per year£9,880£12,570

As NIC is paid according to the pay period, and is not cumulative, only nine months of earnings (from July 2022 to March 2023) will benefit from the higher PT.

Company directors tend to use an annual or quarterly earnings period. Those on quarterly pay will use the lower threshold for the first quarter to 5 July 2022, and the higher PT for the remainder of the year. Those on annual earnings period will use a PT of £11,908 for 2022/23 as specified in clause 4(2) of the National Insurance Contributions (Increase of Thresholds) Bill 2022.

Self-employed class 4 

The lower profits limit (LPL), from which class 4 NIC becomes payable, is also increased to align with the personal allowance of £12,570, but over two years. The upper profits limit is frozen at £50,270.

Tax Year Main rate Additional rateLPLUpper profits limit
2022/2310.25%3.25%£11,908£50,270
2023/2410.25%*3.25%*£12,570£50,270

* Including Health and Social Care levy

For 2022/23 the LPL will be £11,908, that is nine months of the increased level, to make it equivalent to the same NIC allowance enjoyed by employees. Although the self-employed individual will pay class 4 NIC at the main rate of 10.25%, which is three percentage points lower than the class 1 NIC paid on the same income band by an employee.  

Self-employed class 2 NIC

The class 2 NIC paid by the self-employed creates a contribution record for the individual, unlike the class 4 NIC, which is a pure tax. 

The class 2 small profits threshold (SPT) will remain in place from April 2022, but the individual will not be liable to pay class 2 NIC until their profits exceed the lower profits threshold for the tax year, which is aligned with the lower profits threshold for class 4 NIC.

Tax year Flat rate per week   Small profits threshold  Lower profits limit 
2022/23£3.15£6,725£11,908 
2023/24TBATBA £12,570

New class 2 NI credit 

Where the individual has annual profits between the SPT and the LPL, they will effectively build up a NI credit for that year, while paying zero class 2 NIC. Note that the taxpayer has to make profits at least equal to the SPT for the year in order to benefit from this class 2 NI credit. 

In order to receive the class 2 NI credit the taxpayer will have to submit a tax return, although if they have no other income in the year they will have no tax to pay. 

The introduction of the class 2 NI credit does not eliminate the need for voluntary class 2 NIC payments. Where the trading profits are less than the SPT the individual may still wish to pay voluntary class 2 NIC in order to maintain their contribution record and qualify for the state pension, as well as for other contributory benefits.

Budget, DMS Posts, Other, Tax

Budget 2021 at a glance

BUDGET 3 MARCH 2021

This Summary covers the key tax changes announced in the Chancellor’s speech
and includes tables of the main rates and allowances.
At the back of the Summary you will find a calendar of the tax year with important
deadline dates shown.
We recommend that you review your financial plans regularly as some aspects
of the Budget will not be implemented until later dates.
We will, of course, be happy to discuss with you any of the points covered in
this report and help you adapt and reassess your plans in the light of any
legislative changes

A delicate balance
The Chancellor had a difficult task in this Budget: to indicate how he might balance the Government’s books in the future, while still having to pay out huge sums to support the economy. He said that he would continue to provide ‘whatever it takes’ to protect businesses and jobs during the present crisis, while being honest
about the need to ‘fix the public finances’ and setting out his plans to build the future economy.


After spending so much, it was inevitable that Mr Sunak would have to raise taxes
somewhere – but he was bound by an election promise not to raise the rates of Income
Tax, National Insurance Contributions or VAT during the life of the Parliament. There
has been speculation that he might reduce relief for pensions or bring Capital Gains
Tax rates in line with Income Tax. In the event, neither was mentioned; we are promised
consultation documents on 23 March that may raise those possibilities, but they are not
an immediate prospect. Instead, Corporation Tax will go up – not until 2023, and after
extra tax reliefs have been offered for investment in the meantime. There will also be the
less visible effect of freezing personal allowances and other reliefs until 2026, increasing
the tax take year by year as inflation pushes more people over the limits.
When the Chancellor sits down, the Government publishes everything on the internet –
measures he hasn’t mentioned, the detail of things he only touched on and the tables
of financial estimates that show what makes a big difference to the public finances and
what is marginal. This booklet summarises the most important points and explains how
they affect businesses and individuals. We will be happy to discuss the proposals with
you and help you understand the implications for your finances.
Significant points
• Further support for individuals and businesses impacted by the pandemic: extensions
for job retention scheme and self-employed income support grants, business rates
relief, 5% VAT rate on hospitality and leisure; new grants and loans announced
• Small increase in Income Tax thresholds for 2021/22, followed by a freeze until 2025/26
• Freeze in pension scheme Lifetime Allowance, Capital Gains Tax (CGT) annual exempt
amount and Inheritance Tax (IHT) nil rate band until 2025/26
• No change to the rates of CGT
• Corporation Tax rate held at 19% until 31 March 2023, after which companies with
profits over £250,000 will be taxed at 25%
• ‘Super-deduction’ introduced for companies investing in plant and machinery between
1 April 2021 and 31 March 2023
• Trading losses up to £2 million in 2020/21 and 2021/22 eligible for carry back against
previous 3 years’ profits, instead of the usual one year
• Stamp Duty Land Tax ‘holiday’ for the first £500,000 of residential property cost is
extended to 30 June 2021, with a further reduction in charges up to 30 September 2021

Measures to mitigate the impact of Coronavirus
The Chancellor began by setting out further measures to provide support for
businesses and individuals suffering from the financial effects of the pandemic.
The monetary amount of these items, as set out in the Budget forecasts, is far greater
than the impact of most tax announcements. Most of these measures apply across
the UK, but the Budget only deals with business rates in England and Stamp Duty
Land Tax in England and Northern Ireland. The devolved administrations make their
own provisions in those areas.
Measures relating to direct taxes and VAT are described in their own separate sections.


Employers
The Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme will continue to reimburse employers with
the salaries of furloughed employees until 30 September 2021. The employee should
receive at least 80% of normal pay for hours not worked. Until 30 June, the employer
will only be required to contribute employer’s National Insurance Contributions and
pension contributions (as at present); in July, the employer will have to contribute 1/8
of the remaining cost (i.e. 10% of normal salary), rising to 1/4 (20% of normal salary) in
August and September.
For the time being, small and medium-sized employers across the UK will continue to
be able to reclaim up to two weeks of eligible Statutory Sick Pay costs per employee,
where the absence is coronavirus-related. The Government will set out steps for
closing this scheme in due course.


Self-employed
Self-employed people with profits up to £50,000 have been able to claim grants
under the Self-Employed Income Support Scheme (SEISS). There have so far been
three grants under the SEISS, each covering three months; two amounted to 80%
and one amounted to 70% of average monthly profits up to limits of £2,500 and
£2,187.50 respectively per month. A fourth grant, covering February to April 2021, will
be claimable from late April at 80% of three months’ average profits capped at £7,500
in total. Claimants must have filed a 2019/20 tax return to be eligible for this grant.
People who began self employment in 2019/20, who did not have a record of earnings,
could not claim the first three grants, but may be able to claim the fourth grant if they
have filed a 2019/20 return by midnight on 2 March 2021.
A fifth grant, covering the period from May to September 2021, can be claimed from
late July. This will be targeted at those who need it most as the economy reopens.
Those whose turnover has fallen by 30% or more will be eligible for the full grant,
which will be 80% of three months’ average profits capped at £7,500. The fact that the
grant covers a five-month period appears to allow for the likelihood that the business
will be reopening in that time. Those whose turnover has fallen by less than 30% will
receive a 30% grant, capped at £2,850. Further details will be published in due course.

The Budget confirms that SEISS grants will be treated as taxable income of the
business in the tax year in which they are received.
There have been complaints of unfairness from certain categories of people who fall
outside these support schemes, in particular people whose profits were previously
just over £50,000 (who are not eligible for any support) and people working through
their own company (who can claim the furlough grant, but that will not replace profits
previously paid out as dividends). The Budget does not extend any reliefs to people in
these categories.


Benefits
The uplift of £20 per week on Universal Credit will be extended to the end of
September, and some other easements in the calculation of the benefit will continue
for the time being. For those claiming Working Tax Credit, a one-off payment of £500
will be made to provide equivalent support over the next six months.
Loans and grants
There have been several Government-backed loan schemes to support businesses
through the pandemic. Some of these are coming to an end on 31 March 2021, but
the Chancellor announced a new ‘Recovery Loan Scheme’. This will provide lenders
with a guarantee of 80% on eligible loans between £25,000 and £10 million to give
them confidence in continuing to provide finance to UK businesses. This will be open
to all businesses from 6 April 2021, including those who have already received support
under the existing COVID-19 loan schemes.
The Chancellor also announced ‘Restart Grants’: as they reopen after the present
lockdown, non-essential retail businesses can claim up to £6,000 per premises;
hospitality, accommodation, leisure, personal care and gym businesses can claim
up to £18,000 per premises. The Government is also providing £425 million to local
authorities to use for discretionary grants to businesses.


Business rates
Eligible retail, hospitality, leisure and nursery properties in England have enjoyed
100% business rates relief in 2020/21. This will be extended to 30 June 2021, and
there will be a further 66% relief for the period to 31 March 2022, capped at £2 million
per business for properties that were required to be closed on 5 January 2021, or
£105,000 per business for other eligible properties.

Personal Income Tax
Tax rates and allowances – 2021/22 (Table A)

The main Personal Allowance increases with inflation from £12,500 to £12,570 for
2021/22, and the basic rate band increases from £37,500 to £37,700. That means
that the threshold for 40% tax is now £50,270. Income Tax rates are complicated by
different rates and allowances applying to different types of income (for example,
salary, profits, rent, interest, dividends), so the effect of these increases are not the
same for all taxpayers; someone with a salary of £50,270 will pay £68 less tax in
2021/22 than they did in 2020/21 (falling from £7,608 to £7,540). However, they will
also pay £19 more in employee’s National Insurance Contributions.
Since January 2013, there has been a clawback charge on the higher earner of
a couple where one claims Child Benefit and either has an income over £50,000.
This has always been called the ‘High Income Child Benefit Charge’, but now it
appears that it can apply to a basic rate taxpayer, because there has been no
mention of a change to the £50,000 threshold.


The level of income at which the Personal Allowance is withdrawn has been £100,000
since the rule was introduced in April 2010, and inflation means that far more people
are now affected. Every £2 of income over that level reduces the allowance by £1.
This results in an effective marginal rate of tax of 60% in the band of income up to
£125,140 in 2021/22, above which the taxpayer will have no Personal Allowance.
The Scottish Parliament has set different tax rates and thresholds for Scottish
taxpayers for non-savings, non-dividend income (details in Table A). The Welsh
Government has similar powers for Welsh taxpayers, but has announced that it will
not currently vary the main UK rates.


Tax rates and allowances – freezing
The Chancellor announced that the Personal Allowance and the rate bands will be
frozen at their 2021/22 levels until the end of 2025/26, instead of their usual inflationary
increases each year. This has enabled him to keep the manifesto pledge of not
increasing the tax rates themselves, but so-called ‘fiscal drag’ will increase the tax
due from people whose pay increases during that period. This is one of the ways in
which the Chancellor aims to recover some of the huge cost of the pandemic support
payments. In 2025/26, the Government expects to collect an extra £8 billion in Income
Tax as a result – to put that in context, the fourth and fifth self-employed income
support grants are expected to cost £12.75 billion in 2021/22.

Employees
COVID tests and working from home

A number of relaxations of the rules relating to the pandemic, introduced in 2020/21,
will continue into 2021/22. These include exemptions from taxable benefit charges on
reimbursement of COVID tests by employers and the provision of relevant equipment
to enable employees to work from home. The conditions for the Cycle to Work scheme,
which require a bicycle to be mainly used for commuting or work journeys to avoid an
Income Tax charge, have also been relaxed for employees who were provided with
a bicycle by their employer before 20 December 2020.
Company cars and fuel (Table C)
The basis for taxing company cars and fuel provided for private use is set out in the
Table. No changes were made to the rates announced for car benefits in previous
years, so cars first registered after 5 April 2020 will see their benefit charge rise by one
percentage point. Note that fully electric cars gave rise to no tax charge in 2020/21, but
there will be a charge on 1% of their list price in 2021/22, increasing to 2% in 2022/23.
There have also been changes to the taxable figures for vans with private use, including
removing the taxable benefit on zero-emission vans with effect from
6 April 2021.


‘Off payroll’ working
HMRC has been concerned about individuals working through personal service
companies (PSCs) for two decades: they regard this as a way of avoiding PAYE and
Class 1 NIC where ‘in reality’ (in HMRC’s view) the individual is acting as an employee.
The ‘IR35’ rules require PSCs to pay PAYE and NIC on income from engagements
that are effectively employments. From 6 April 2017, where the individual behind the
PSC works in the public sector, the responsibility for paying this tax was transferred
to the person paying the PSC, and the responsibility for deciding ‘what is effectively
employment’ was imposed on the public sector engager. HMRC is convinced that
this has reduced non-compliance and intended to extend the same rules to large and
medium-sized engagers in the private sector from April 2020. Because of the pandemic,
this was delayed to 6 April 2021. Only technical amendments to the rules were
announced in the Budget, so this will be introduced as planned.
This is a very significant and potentially contentious change for all those who work
through, and those who contract with, PSCs. It will be important to understand the
decisions that have to be made, who has the responsibility for taking them, and what to
do if the parties to a contract do not agree about its status.

Enterprise Management Incentives
EMI scheme participants must meet a minimum working time commitment of either
25 hours per week or 75% of total working time, subject to a small list of exceptions.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, many workers are on reduced hours or furlough and
would therefore break the condition.
A time-limited easement of this rule, running from 19 March 2020 until 5 April 2022,
applies where employees have not met the working time requirement as a result of
coronavirus. It ensures that participants are not forced to exercise their options earlier
than planned and also guarantees that participants can be granted qualifying options
during the pandemic.


National Insurance Contributions
Thresholds and rates (Table D)

There have been small increases in the thresholds above which employer’s and
employee’s National Insurance Contributions become payable. The upper limits for
employee contributions remain aligned with the point at which 40% Income Tax is
payable (£50,270 per year, or £967 per week).
The upper limit will be frozen, in common with the personal allowance and basic rate
band, until the end of 2025/26. Raising the upper limit increases the amount of NIC
payable – salary below that level is charged at 12%, but above that level it is charged
at 2%. The Budget documents state that decisions will be taken each year on the
lower threshold, which is not being fixed in advance.


Savings and Pensions
ISA limits

The investment limits for 2021/22 remain £20,000 for a standard adult ISA (within which
£4,000 may be in a Lifetime ISA), and £9,000 for a Junior ISA or Child Trust Fund.
Pension contributions (Table B)
There has been speculation that the Chancellor might reduce pension tax relief, which
costs the Exchequer a great deal. There were no significant announcements of reform
in the Budget, although a number of consultations are expected on 23 March that
might deal with this. The only measure announced related to the Lifetime Allowance
(LA), which is the maximum amount that a person can save in tax-advantaged pension
schemes before extra tax charges arise on drawing benefits. The value of benefits is
measured against the LA when benefits are first taken from a pension, and on some
other occasions, including the individual’s 75th birthday. The LA is frozen at its 2020/21
level of £1,073,100 until the end of 2025/26. When LA was first introduced in 2006,
it was £1,800,000; fixing it at this level will mean that many more people will have to
consider the tax charges when they draw their pensions over the next few years.

Capital Gains Tax


Rates and annual exempt amount

CGT is not subject to the Conservative manifesto pledge not to increase the rates
of Income Tax, National Insurance Contributions or VAT, which has contributed to
speculation that CGT rates might be increased, possibly aligning them with Income
Tax. No such announcement was made in the Budget, but a number of consultations
to be issued on 23 March may cover this. Any change is unlikely to be introduced
before the end of 2021/22, because the documents issued with the Budget show
no changes to CGT rates.
The annual exempt amount will be fixed at its 2020/21 level of £12,300 until the end
of 2025/26.


Inheritance Tax Rates
The IHT nil rate band was increased to £325,000 on 6 April 2009, and previous
Budgets had fixed it at that level until the end of 2020/21. This Budget has further
fixed it until the end of 2025/26. Holding the threshold at the same amount for
17 years will bring far more people into the scope of the tax. However, the introduction
of the ‘residential nil rate band enhancement’ on death transfers can reduce the
impact where it applies. From 6 April 2020, a married couple are able to leave up to
£1 million free of IHT to their direct descendants (£325,000 plus £175,000 from each
parent), but the rules are complicated, and the prospect of the nil rate band being fixed
for the next 5 years increases the importance of proper IHT planning.


Business Tax
Carry back of losses

Companies and unincorporated businesses can normally set their trading losses
against profits of the current or the previous 12-month period, or else carry them
forward against future profits. Where a business has made a large loss because
of the pandemic, or makes losses in two successive periods, the 12-month carry
back may not be enough to relieve the whole amount. The Budget has extended the
normal 12-month carry-back to three years, for both unincorporated businesses
and companies, for trading losses of 2020/21 and 2021/22. For example, a loss of
2020/21 can be carried back against pre-pandemic profits of 2019/20, 2018/19
and 2017/18; without the extension, the claim could only have been made against
2019/20.
There is a limit on the total amount to be carried back to the second and third earlier
year of £2 million in each year of loss for unincorporated businesses and companies
that are not part of a corporate group. A group with companies that have capacity to
carry back losses in excess of £200,000 will have to apportion the cap between its
member companies. The way in which this ‘group cap’ will operate will be announced
in due course.


Corporation Tax rates
The Corporation Tax rate will remain 19% until 31 March 2023. It will then increase to
25% for companies with profits over £250,000. Since 1 April 2015, all corporate profits
have been taxed at the same rate; the ‘small profits rate’ that was familiar before that
will be reintroduced, at 19% for companies with profits up to £50,000, in April 2023.
Between £50,000 and £250,000 there will be a tapering calculation that produces
an effective marginal rate of 26.5%. The limits will be divided between associated
companies under common control.
The two measures described above and below, which allow losses to be carried
back for immediate relief rather than carried forward and give enhanced relief for
investment in plant up to 31 March 2023, will help with cash flow; however, it should
be borne in mind that both of them will give rise to tax relief against liabilities charged
at 19%, and will tend to increase later profits that may be taxed at 25%. Such a sharp
increase in a tax rate gives rise to planning opportunities and pitfalls to avoid.
‘Super-deduction’ for plant and machinery
For qualifying expenditure on plant and machinery (P&M) contracted for from
3 March 2021 and incurred from 1 April 2021 to 31 March 2023, companies can claim:


• a super-deduction, providing allowances of 130% on new P&M investment that
would qualify for 18% writing down allowances (WDAs) in the main Capital
Allowance pool;
• a first-year allowance (FYA) of 50% on new plant and machinery investment that
would qualify for 6% WDAs in the special rate pool.
The rate of the super-deduction will require apportioning if an accounting period
straddles 1 April 2023.


Cars are excluded (with certain exceptions, such as dual-control vehicles used by
driving instructors), as are contracts entered into prior to 3 March 2021, even if
expenditure is incurred on or after 1 April 2021.
Expenditure incurred under a hire purchase or similar contract must meet additional
conditions to qualify for these extra reliefs.
Where the super-deduction has been claimed, there will be a proportionate increase in
the proceeds of sale for Capital Allowances purposes. For both the super-deduction
and FYA, the proceeds will be treated as balancing charges (i.e. immediately taxable
profits) rather than being deducted from pool expenditure.

Annual Investment Allowance

Companies and unincorporated businesses can continue to claim the 100% Annual Investment Allowance on qualifying expenditure up to £1 million until 31 December 2021, subject to transitional rules where accounting periods straddle that date. This may produce more tax relief for companies than the 50% FYA available for special rate expenditure, where it is incurred between 1 April 2021 and 31 December 2021.

Research and Development (R&D)

Small or medium-sized companies conducting qualifying research and development can claim an enhanced deduction of 230% (i.e. £230 for each £100 of qualifying expenditure). Where this produces a loss, it can be surrendered for a payable tax credit of 14.5%. For accounting periods beginning on or after 1 April 2021, the amount of payable credit that can be claimed is capped at £20,000 plus three times the company’s PAYE and NIC liabilities for the period. This definition also includes some PAYE and NIC liabilities of connected persons doing subcontracted R&D for, or providing workers to, the company. There are no changes to the R&D Expenditure Credit (RDEC) rules for large companies. However, the Government has announced a review of R&D tax reliefs, with a consultation published alongside the Budget. The intentions are that the UK should remain a competitive location for cutting edge research, that the reliefs continue to be fit for purpose and that taxpayer money is effectively targeted.

VAT

VAT Registration threshold

The VAT registration and deregistration thresholds will remain frozen at their present levels of £85,000 and £83,000 until 31 March 2024. This will tend to require more businesses to register for the tax as they grow, and therefore represents a small tax-raising measure.

Reduced rate

To help support businesses heavily impacted by the pandemic, the rate of VAT on most supplies by hospitality, leisure and entertainment businesses was cut from 20% to 5% in July 2020. This was initially intended to expire in January 2021, but that was extended to 31 March, and it has now been further extended to 30 September 2021. An intermediate rate of 12.5% will apply for qualifying supplies from 1 October 2021 to 31 March 2022, after which the standard 20% rate will apply again. HMRC says that there are no plans to introduce ‘anti-forestalling rules’ to counter the VAT saving enjoyed by someone who pays a deposit before the rate goes back up – on present plans, that will lock in the lower rate of VAT to the extent that the supply is paid for before 30 September, even if the actual supply takes place later.

Payment of deferred VAT

Businesses could defer the payment of VAT that fell due between March and June 2020. Initially the deferred amount was to be paid in full by 31 March 2021, but businesses can now apply to pay it by interest-free instalments up to 31 March 2022. Applications must be made online by 21 June 2021, but if the scheme is applied for earlier, the payments can be spread over a longer period.

Default surcharge

HMRC has announced that the long-awaited reform of the system of penalties for late payment of tax will be implemented over the next three years, starting with the replacement of default surcharge for accounting periods starting from 1 April 2022. Many of those who have fallen foul of default surcharge regard it as unfair and arbitrary, so it is to be hoped that what replaces it will be a better system. In the meantime, any warnings that default surcharge might be levied should still be taken very seriously.

Making Tax Digital

The Budget also confirms the intention to bring all VAT-registered businesses, including those currently trading below the registration threshold, within the Making Tax Digital reporting system with effect from 1 April 2022.

Stamp Duty Land Tax

Extension of ‘holiday’

The threshold for charging SDLT on residential property in England was temporarily raised to £500,000, with the intention that transactions had to be completed by 31 March 2021. This has now been extended to 30 June 2021, and for transactions between 1 July and 30 September 2021 the threshold will be £250,000. It will revert to the normal level of £125,000 from 1 October, and the normal 2% charge will apply between £125,000 and £250,000. The Welsh Parliament has also extended the £250,000 nil rate threshold for Land Transaction Tax to 30 June 2021.

Foreign resident buyers

With effect from 1 April 2021, foreign resident purchasers of residential property in England and Northern Ireland will be subject to a 2% surcharge on the Stamp Duty Land Tax they would otherwise pay. This is intended to reduce house price inflation and make property available for first-time buyers.

Other measures
Freeports

The Budget outlines the introduction of ‘Freeports’, areas in which a number of tax
and other incentives will operate to encourage trade. Eight areas in England have
been announced, with discussions in progress to extend the concept in the other
nations of the United Kingdom. The enhanced tax reliefs will include 10% Structures
and Buildings Allowances (instead of 3%), 100% First Year Allowances for plant
and machinery, full relief from Stamp Duty Land Tax, full Business Rates relief, and
relief from Employer National Insurance Contributions. The reliefs will depend on
designation as a ‘tax site’ within a Freeport and will run until 30 September 2026.
The English Freeports announced so far are East Midlands Airport, Felixstowe &
Harwich, Humber, Liverpool City Region, Plymouth and South Devon, Solent, Teesside
and Thames. They are expected to start operating in late 2021.


Compliance
The Budget includes several mentions of increased efforts to crack down on
avoidance, evasion and non-compliance. The Government intends to invest £180
million in additional resources and new technology for HMRC in order to bring in
£1.6 billion of additional tax revenue between now and 2025/26. The benefits are
supposed to include ‘enabling taxpayers to more easily access tax services and make
the collection of tax and payments to taxpayers easier’, but the overall effect is clearly
intended to raise revenue.
£100 million will also be invested in a Taxpayer Protection Taskforce of 1,265 HMRC
staff to combat fraud within COVID-19 support packages. HMRC’s ability to distribute
money has been one of the success stories of the pandemic, but giving the cash to
people who need it has involved taking the risk that the system can be exploited.
They are now going to try to find the people who took advantage.

Budget, DMS Posts, Tax

What’s changing for small businesses in the 2020/2021 tax year?

A new tax year is starting on April 6th, which will mean many of the changes announced in recent Budgets will come into effect. Before the 2020/2021 tax year kicks off, here’s a roundup of some of the key changes small business.

Changes to some tax and National Insurance rates and bands

Some of the rates and bands have been frozen, while others have increased. Here are the rates and bands that will come into effect on 6th April:

England, Northern Ireland and Wales

2020/212019/20
Personal allowance£12,500£12,500
Employee’s NI becomes due at£9,500£8,632
Employer’s NI becomes due at£8,788£8,632
Higher rate tax becomes due at£50,000£50,000
Class 2 NI becomes due when profits exceed£6,475£6,365
Class 2 NI per week£3.05£3.00
Class 4 NI becomes due when profits exceed£9,500£8,632

Scottish Tax Rates and Bands

The Scottish rates of income tax will change to the below on 11th May 2020.

2020/212019/20
Personal allowance£0 – £12,500£0 – £12,500
Starter rate 19%£12,501 – £14,585£12,501 – £14,549
Basic rate 20%£14,586 – £25,158£14,550 – £24,944
Intermediate rate 21%£25,159 – £43,430£24,945 – £43,430
Higher rate 41%£43,431 – £150,000£43,431 – £150,000
Top rate 46%Over £150,000Over £150,000

Employment Allowance Increased

The Employment Allowance will increase from £3,000 to £4,000 on 6th April but from this date, only businesses with an employer’s NI liability of under £100,000 a year will be eligible to claim the allowance.

National Minimum Wage / National Living Wage rates per hour increased

The following rates will all increase on 6th April:

2020/212019/20
Employees aged 25 and over: NLW£8.72£8.21
Employees aged under 18: NMW£4.55£4.35
Employees aged 18-20: NMW£6.45£6.15
Employees aged 21-24: NMW£8.20£7.70

Student Loan Income thresholds

The levels of income above which student loan repayments are due will change on 6th April as follows:

2020/212019/20
Undergraduate loan: plan 1£19,390£18,935
Undergraduate loan: plan 2£26,575£25,725
Postgraduate loan£21,000£21,000

Working from home rate for employees increased

If any of your clients operate their own limited company and claim costs for working from home, HMRC will ask them for proof of any working from home costs of over £6 (rather than £4) from 6th April 2020.

Delays and cancellations to planned changes

Corporation Tax rate holds steady

The rate at which limited companies pay Corporation Tax was originally planned to decrease from 19% to 17% on 1st April but these plans have now been cancelled. The rate of Corporation Tax will now remain at 19%.

IR35 changes delayed

Changes to the operation of IR35 legislation in the private sector that were due to take effect on 6th April 2020 have now been delayed until April 2021.

Budget, DMS Posts, Other

Covid-19: IR35 changes delayed and other financial measures

As part of a wide package of financial measures designed to support the UK economy through this turbulent period, Chancellor Rishi Sunak unveiled a £350bn support package on Tuesday night.

IR35 reforms in the private sector delayed

In an unexpected U-turn, the government has announced that its planned reforms to IR35 legislation will be delayed for a year. The reforms, which will affect contractors who work in the private sector, were due to be implemented on 6th April this year but will now come into effect in April 2021. The delay should come as welcome news to accountants, bookkeepers and their contractor clients who work in the private sector.

Changes for pubs and restaurants

Pubs and restaurants will be granted fast-track planning permission to serve takeaway hot food and drinks. This measure is intended to help these businesses survive at a time when customers have been advised to stay at home.

Retail, hospitality and leisure industry business rates

Clients in the retail, hospitality and leisure industries that pay business rates will not have to pay these rates in the 2020/21 tax year and will potentially be eligible for a £25,000 grant. It’s not yet clear how clients will be able to access this grant but we’ll provide information as soon as it becomes available.

Small business rate relief

Clients with smaller businesses that operate from properties with a rateable value of £15,000 or less (making them eligible for small business rate relief) will be entitled to a grant of up to £10,000 each. This is an increase from the £3,000 grant announced in last week’s Budget. The grant will also be available to businesses that qualify for rural rate relief. Businesses do not need to apply for these grants; their local authorities will contact them directly.

Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme

The Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme, announced last week in the Budget, has now been extended to offer loans of up to £5 million, with no interest due for the first six months. At the moment, we aren’t privy to a huge amount of information about what the scheme will entail. However, the government’s website currently refers to it as a scheme to “support long-term viable businesses who may need to respond to cash-flow pressures by seeking additional finance”. The temporary Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme will be delivered by the state-owned British Business Bank and according to the bank’s website, the loans should be available from 23rd March.

Support for the self-employed

Sadly, no specific support has been announced for the self-employed, who cannot access the Statutory Sick Pay reclaim announced in the Budget. We’re monitoring developments we’ll let you know if the situation changes.

Budget, DMS Posts, Tax

Summary of Budget 2020: Key points at-a-glance

Here is a summary of the main points.

Coronavirus and public services

  • £5bn emergency response fund to support the NHS and other public services in England
  • All those advised to self-isolate will be entitled to statutory sick pay, even if they have not presented with symptoms
  • Self-employed workers who are not eligible will be able to claim contributory Employment Support Allowance
  • The ESA benefit will be available from day one, not after a week as now
  • £500m hardship fund for councils in England to help the most vulnerable in their areas
  • Firms with fewer than 250 staff will be refunded for sick pay payments for two weeks
  • Small firms will be able to access “business interruption” loans of up to £1.2m
  • Business rates in England will be abolished for firms in the retail, leisure and hospitality sectors with a rateable value below £51,000
  • £6bn in extra NHS funding over five years to pay for staff recruitment and start of hospital upgrades

Personal taxation, wages and pensions

Pay slip
  • The tax threshold for National Insurance Contributions will rise from £8,632 to £9,500
  • The move, first announced in November, will take 500,000 employees out of the tax altogether
  • Those earning more than £9,500 will be, on average, £85 a year better off
  • 5% VAT on women’s sanitary products, known as the tampon tax, to be scrapped
  • No other new announcements on income tax, national insurance or VAT
  • Tax paid on the pensions of high earners, including NHS consultants, to be recalculated to address staffing issues

Alcohol, tobacco and fuel

Man paying for a pin of beer
  • Fuel duty to be frozen for the 10th consecutive year
  • Duties on spirits, beer, cider and wine to be frozen
  • Tobacco taxes will continue to rise by 2% above the rate of retail price inflation
  • This will add 27 pence to a pack of 20 cigarettes and 14 pence to a packet of cigars
  • Business rate discounts for pubs to rise from £1,000 to £5,000 this year
Men and a woman with laptops
  • System of High Street business rates to be reviewed later this year
  • Firms eligible for small business rates relief will get £3,000 cash grant
  • Entrepreneurs’ Relief will be retained, but lifetime allowance will be reduced from £10m to £1m
  • £5bn to be spent on getting gigabit-capable broadband into the hardest-to-reach places
  • Science Institute in Weybridge, Surrey to get a £1.4bn funding boost
  • An extra £900m for research into nuclear fusion, space and electric vehicles
  • VAT on digital publications, including newspapers, e-books and academic journals to be scrapped from December

Environment and energy

Plastic bottles
  • Plastic packaging tax to come into force from April 2022
  • Manufacturers and importers whose products have less than 30% recyclable material will be charged £200 per tonne
  • Subsidies for fuel used in off-road vehicles – known as red diesel – will be scrapped “for most sectors” in two years’ time
  • Red diesel subsidies will remain for farmers and rail operators
  • £120m in emergency relief for English communities affected by this winter’s flooding and £200m for flood resilience
  • Total investment in flood defences in England to be doubled to £5.2bn over next five years
  • £640m “nature for climate fund” to protect natural habitats in England, including 30,000 hectares of new trees

Transport, infrastructure and housing

Traffic on the A303 near Stonehenge
  • More than £600bn is set to be spent on roads, rail, broadband and housing by the middle of 2025
  • There will be £27bn for motorways and other arterial roads, including new tunnel for the A303 near Stonehenge
  • £2.5bn will be available to fix potholes and resurface roads in England over five years
  • Further education colleges will get £1.5bn to upgrade their buildings
  • £650m package to tackle homelessness, providing an extra 6,000 places for rough sleepers
  • Stamp duty surcharge for foreign buyers of properties in England and Northern Ireland to be levied at 2% from April 2021
  • New £1bn fund to remove all unsafe combustible cladding from all public and private housing higher than 18 metres