Autumn Budget 2025 – Key Highlights

26 November 2025
by
Zubaria Zafar

Autumn Budget 2025 – Key Highlights

26 November 2025
by
Zubaria Zafar

Autumn Budget 2025 – Key Highlights

Following are some of the key highlights from the autumn budget 2025:

Personal Taxes & Savings

  • Cash ISA allowance reduced to £12,000 from April 2027 for individuals under 65.
    Stocks & Shares ISA allowance remains unchanged at £20,000.
  • Two-child benefit cap removed from April 2026, expanding eligibility for many households.
  • No changes to Income Tax rates, but thresholds are frozen until April 2031, extending fiscal drag.
  • State Pension increased by 4.8% from April 2026, worth up to ~£575 extra per year.
  • Taxes on savings, dividends, and property income rise by 2 percentage points from April 2026.
  • Inheritance Tax and pension tax-free cash rules remain unchanged.
  • Energy bills to fall by ~£150 per year due to reductions in environmental levies (from 2026).
  • National Living Wage for 21+ increases to £12.71/hour from April 2026.

Property & Wealth

  • High-value council tax surcharge (“Mansion Tax”) introduced from April 2028:
    £2,500 per year for homes valued £2m+
    £7,500 per year for properties £5m+
  • Additional tightening of tax treatment for wealth-derived income (dividends, interest, property income).
  • No changes announced to CGT rates but fiscal drag will pull more gains into higher tax bands.

Transport & Consumption

  • New EV mileage tax introduced from April 2028, replacing lost fuel-duty revenue as EV adoption rises.
  • Fuel duty remains frozen until at least August 2026.
  • Regulated rail fares frozen until March 2027.
  • Sugar tax extended to additional product categories as part of health-policy reforms.

Business-Relevant Measures

  • National Insurance to apply to salary-sacrifice pension contributions above £2,000 from April 2029, raising an estimated £4.7bn by 2030.
  • Minimum wage increases confirmed for April 2026.
    → Over-21 rate rising to £12.71/hour.
  • Tourist tax powers devolved to Metro Mayors, enabling local authorities to impose visitor levies.
  • Continued support for business investment via targeted incentives, though no broad corporate tax cuts.
  • Wider freeze of thresholds also affects employers through increased effective tax burdens.

Fiscal & Market Context

  • The Treasury aims to raise £30bn in additional tax revenues by 2030, alongside £12bn in additional public spending, much of it directed toward the NHS, childcare, and local transport.
  • A leaked OBR assessment pushed UK 10-year gilt yields lower, temporarily easing government borrowing costs.
  • Fiscal strategy depends heavily on threshold freezes (“stealth taxes”) and targeted levies on wealth and property.

Market Implications

Recent GBP and gilt-market movements have been driven by:

  • US rate-cut expectations (generally weakening USD)
  • Concerns around UK fiscal credibility and rising debt servicing costs
  • Pre-Budget uncertainty and volatility

The Budget does not materially shift market direction on its own but contributes to a broader theme of:

  • A structurally higher long-term tax burden
  • A moderate, constrained growth outlook
  • Persistent pressure on household and business finances

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