The VAT registration threshold
From 1 April 2026 the VAT registration threshold remains at £90,000 and the
deregistration threshold at £88,000.
Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment
The government is committed to delivering Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self
Assessment, which starts in April 2026 for those with qualifying income over
£50,000. The government will expand the rollout of the programme to those with
incomes over £30,000 in April 2027 and £20,000 in April 2028. However, the
government will not proceed with Making Tax Digital for Corporation Tax.
Enforcement and tax collection
The government has announced a variety of compliance initiatives, which include the
following:
- investing further in HMRC's debt management work and publishing a new tax debt
strategy which outlines plans to deliver year-on-year reductions to the overall
tax debt balance as a percentage of tax receipts
- requiring Income Tax Self Assessment taxpayers with Pay As You Earn (PAYE)
income to pay more of their Self Assessment liabilities in-year via PAYE from
April 2029
- investing in HMRC to modernise the tax system and help taxpayers get their taxes
right first time through greater digitalisation. This investment will improve
how HMRC uses information from third parties, and to build new technology to
increase the use of data-driven prompts to help taxpayers avoid errors when
submitting tax returns
- investing £64 million over the next five years in HMRC's existing partnerships
with private sector debt collection agencies to collect more tax debt.
In addition, from April 2029 businesses will be required to issue all VAT invoices as
e-invoices, with a roadmap on implementation to be published next year.
Comment
The government is attempting to close the tax gap by pursuing those who try to
bend or break the rules, collecting more unpaid taxes and modernising the tax
system. This is designed to take the total additional revenue raised by closing
the tax gap this Parliament to £10 billion in 2029/30.
High Value Council Tax Surcharge
The current Council Tax system uses property values from 1991. From April 2028,
properties valued at £2 million or more will be liable to a new High Value Council
Tax Surcharge (HVCTS).
The HVCTS will be staggered depending on the value of the property. For property over
£2 million, the annual charge will be £2,500. For property valued between £2.5 -
£3.5 million, the annual charge will be £3,500 and for those properties valued
between £3.5 - £5 million, the annual charge will be £5,000. Properties valued in
excess of £5 million will have an annual charge of £7,500.
The surcharge will be collected alongside the existing Council Tax due for the
property.
Employment
The government is working to extend right to work checks to cover businesses hiring
gig economy and zero-hours workers. This will restrict the ability of employers to
take advantage of illegal workers and ensure that legitimate businesses acting
lawfully will not be undercut on labour costs by those who exploit the system.
The government will set up a dedicated 'hidden economy' team within the new Fair Work
Agency from April 2026 to take action in sectors known to have breaches of
employment rights legislation alongside illegal working and tax issues. The team
will initially target hand car washes but will then move onto other high-risk areas.
Electric Vehicle Excise Duty
The government is introducing Electric Vehicle Excise Duty (eVED), a new mileage
charge for electric and plug-in hybrid cars, which will come into effect from April
2028. Drivers will pay for their mileage alongside their existing VED.
The government will work closely with industry and motoring representative groups on
the delivery of the new tax.
The tax paid by EV drivers will be around half the fuel duty rate paid by the average
petrol/diesel driver, with a reduced rate for plug-in hybrid drivers. When eVED
takes effect in April 2028, an average EV driver will pay around £240 per year or
£20 per month.
Other vehicle types, such as vans, buses, motorcycles, coaches and HGVs, will be out
of scope of eVED when it is introduced, with the transition to electric power for
these vehicle types being currently less advanced than for cars.
Other points
Other announcements made by the government include:
- the £35,000 threshold for Winter Fuel Payments will be maintained for this
Parliament
- the government is seeking views on the effectiveness of existing tax incentives,
and the wider tax system, for business founders and scaling firms, and how the
UK can better support these companies to start, scale and stay in the UK.