Personal taxes measures
It was again confirmed that there will not be any increases in the basic, higher, or additional thresholds for income tax, or the rates of employee National Insurance Contributions (NICs). However, the freeze on certain personal tax thresholds will now continue to 2031 and the rates of income tax will increase by 2 percent for property, savings, and dividend income, commencing for dividend income received from April 2026.
The deep freeze continues….
The expected continued freeze on personal tax thresholds was confirmed. The income tax thresholds and the equivalent NICs thresholds for employees and self-employed individuals will stay at their current levels for a further three years until 5 April 2031. The inheritance tax nil rate bands are also frozen for a further year to the same date. The £5,000 secondary NICs threshold for employers will also be frozen until 5 April 2031 after dropping from £9,100 from 6 April 2025.
Property, savings, and dividend income
From 6 April 2026, the basic rate of tax for dividend income will increase from 8.75 percent to 10.75 percent, and the higher rate will increase from 33.75 percent to 35.75 percent. There will be no change to the dividend additional rate which will remain at 39.35 percent.
For both property income and savings income, the 2 percent increases will take effect from 6 April 2027.The property basic rate will be 22 percent, the higher rate will be 42 percent, and the additional rate will be 47 percent. The tax rates on savings income will also increase by 2 percent points across all bands from 6 April 2027 which would appear to include the 0 percent band for the first £5,000 of savings income which would increase to 2 percent.
These increases are likely to act as a disincentive to investment, and for property income will most likely be passed on by landlords to their tenants via higher rents.
Earlier self-assessment payments
From April 2029, Self-Assessment (SA) taxpayers with PAYE income will be required to pay more of their SA liability in-year via PAYE. The Government will publish a consultation in early 2026 on delivering this change, and also on timelier tax payment for those with only SA income.
This changes comes as a surprise given discussions in the last few years in the context of Making Tax Digital that the Government was not seeking to target earlier payments of SA tax.