How Rishi Sunak’s tax freeze will hit your income and wealth

The true cost of Rishi’s big tax freeze: As inflation soars, we reveal how the Chancellor’s frozen thresholds will sneakily punish your income and wealth

  • Last year, the Chancellor froze a series of tax-free allowances for five years
  • The effect of the freeze is now harsher than first feared due to soaring inflation 
  • OBR predicts inflation will hit 8% this tax year, 2.4% the year after and 2% in 2026
  • Here we reveal how the mix of inflation and frozen allowances will cost Britons

The true cost of the Chancellor’s stealth tax raid and soaring inflation is today laid bare. Last year, Rishi Sunak announced that a series of tax-free allowances and thresholds would be frozen for five years.

The sneaky tax grab, by which the Treasury pockets more as wages rise with inflation, is known by economists as ‘fiscal drag’.  Yet the effect of the freeze is now far harsher than first feared, as inflation has skyrocketed and is forecast to soar well above 8 per cent this year.

It comes as the Chancellor raised the National Insurance tax threshold last week and also committed to cut income tax by 1p in the £1 in 2024. 

But today, we reveal how the new toxic mix of inflation and frozen tax allowances will cost Britons.

The analysis, carried out by investment broker Hargreaves Lansdown using Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) figures, reveals that taxpayers will be paying thousands more at the end of the freeze in 2026 — even despite the income tax cut.

The OBR predicts that inflation will hit 8 per cent this tax year, 2.4 per cent the year after, 1.7 per cent in 2025 and then 2 per cent in 2026. 

The spending watchdog has already said income tax will raise an extra £17.5 billion a year after the freeze. Inheritance tax is also expected to bag £8.3 billion a year by 2026 — up 36 per cent on this year’s forecast of £6.1 billion.

Capital gains tax and the pension lifetime allowances have also been frozen until 2026.

Toxic mix: Chancellor Rishi Sunak's Treasury is set to benefit at the expense of taxpayers

Toxic mix: Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s Treasury is set to benefit at the expense of taxpayers

And our figures illustrate how much extra tax individuals will be forced to pay because the thresholds and allowances will not be rising in line. 

The analysis shows that a worker earning £30,000 will be paying £351.59 more income tax every year in 2026, and someone earning £60,000 will be shelling out £1,905.70 more.

The capital gains freeze will cost an investor with a £15,000 return an extra £229.51, and families could be paying £20,732.68 more inheritance tax on an estate worth £600,000.

Meanwhile, savers who bust the pension lifetime allowance face paying an extra £61,182.64 on a £1.2 million retirement fund.

Surging inflation has already caused the OBR to revise its estimates for tax-takes made back in October.

Income tax will now net an extra £4 billion a year by 2026, inheritance tax will bring in £400 million more, and capital gains will hand the Treasury an extra £1.5 billion.

Tom McPhail, director of public affairs at consultancy The Lang Cat, says: ‘Rishi Sunak is proving to be the fiscal drag king, taking billions from us thanks to the insidious combination of frozen allowances and rising inflation, while trying to dress himself up as a tax-cutting Chancellor.

‘His focus is obviously on the General Election expected in 2024, but given the very real and immediate squeeze on people’s living standards, it could prove to be a case of the emperor’s new clothes.’ 

Sarah Coles, personal finance analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, says: ‘Freezing the tax thresholds was always a nasty stealth tax — but with inflation rising through the roof now, it’s a stealth tax on steroids.

‘At a time when so many people are struggling, it feels particularly unfair that the Government is ramping up our tax bills too.’ 

Why did Rishi cut tax and raise tax? 

Why would you cut tax and raise the same tax at the same time? That’s been the slightly baffled response from many people to Rishi Sunak’s Spring Statement.

Effectively, the Chancellor both cut and raised National Insurance – lifting the threshold it is paid at but ignoring calls to ‘spike the hike’ and ploughing ahead with the 1.25 per cent being added to rates.

Bizarrely, the tax rate goes up in April, only for the threshold to rise and reduce bills shortly afterwards in July. And we wonder why people find tax taxing?

On this podcast, Georgie Frost, Lee Boyce and Simon Lambert dive into the detail of the Spring Budget to explain what the NI hike / cut means for you. 

Press play to listen to the episode on the player above, or listen (and please subscribe and review us if you like the podcast) at Apple Podcasts, Acast, Audioboom and Spotify or visit our This is Money Podcast page.    

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