The Chancellor has delivered a Budget to fix the foundations to
deliver on the promise of change after a decade and a half of
stagnation. She set out plans to rebuild the United Kingdom,
while ensuring working people across Northern Ireland don't face
higher taxes in their payslips.
The UK Government was handed a challenging inheritance; £22
billion of unfunded in-year spending pressures, debt at its
highest since the 1960s, an unrealistic forecast for departmental
spending, and stagnating living standards.
This Budget takes difficult decisions to restore economic and
fiscal stability, so that the UK Government can invest in the
economic future of Northern Ireland and lay the foundations for
growth across the UK as its number one mission.
The Chancellor announced that the Northern Ireland Executive will
be provided with a £18.2 billion settlement in 2025/26 – the
largest in real terms in the history of devolution. This includes
a £1.5 billion top-up through the Barnett formula, with £1.2
billion for day-to-day spending and £270 million for capital
investment.
Secretary of State for Northern Ireland said:
This is the biggest real terms settlement for Northern Ireland
since devolution.
The Northern Ireland Executive will get an additional £640
million in Barnett consequentials this year, and an additional
£1.5 billion next year.
This will provide a strong foundation for stability and
growth, and sees the UK Government delivering real change for the
people of Northern Ireland.
We have also confirmed the UK Government's investment in Northern
Ireland's City and Growth deals, which is a huge boost to
communities in both rural and urban areas. The Mid South West and
Causeway Coast and Glens Deals alone will receive a combined
investment from the UK Government of £162 million, and I look
forward to seeing them progress and make a real impact now and in
years to come.
Meanwhile, measures such as the Northern Ireland Enhanced
Investment Zone, continuing support for Northern Ireland
integrated schooling and the UK-wide investment of over £500m in
digital infrastructure through Project Gigabit and the Shared
Rural Network benefit people across Northern Ireland's
communities.
The increase to £37.8 million in funding for the Police Service
of Northern Ireland through the Additional Security Fund,
combined with £8 million for the Executive Programme on
Paramilitarism and Organised Crime, underscores the UK
Government's continuing and steadfast commitment to security.
This budget is positive news for people across Northern
Ireland, encouraging economic growth and enabling the conditions
for a brighter future.
Protecting working people and living standards
While fixing the inheritance requires tough decisions, the
Chancellor has committed to protecting the living standards of
working people. The decisions taken by the Chancellor to rebuild
public finances enable the UK Government to deliver on its pledge
to not increase National Insurance, Income Tax or VAT on working
people in Northern Ireland, meaning they will not see higher
taxes in their payslip.
- The National Living Wage will increase from £11.44 to £12.21
an hour from April 2025. The 6.7% increase – worth £1,400 a year
for a full-time worker – is a significant move towards delivering
a genuine living wage.
- The National Minimum Wage for 18 to 20-year-olds will also
see a record rise from £8.60 to £10 an hour.
- Working people will benefit from these increases, with there
estimated to be around 100,000 minimum wage workers in Northern
Ireland in 2023.
- The Chancellor has made the decision to protect working
people in Northern Ireland from being dragged into higher tax
brackets by confirming that Income Tax and National Insurance
Contributions thresholds will be unfrozen from 2028-29
onwards.
- The Chancellor is also protecting motorists by freezing fuel
duty for one year - a tax cut worth £3 billion, with the
temporary 5p cut extended to 22 March 2026. This will benefit an
estimated 1.3 million people in Northern Ireland, saving the
average car driver £59, vans £126 and Heavy Goods Vehicles £1,079
next year.
- To support pubs and smaller brewers in Northern Ireland, the
UK Government is cutting duty on qualifying draught products by
1p, which represent approximately 3 in 5 alcoholic drinks sold in
pubs. This measure reduces duty bills by over £70 million a year,
cutting duty on an average strength pint in a pub by a penny. The
relief available to small producers will be updated to help
smaller brewers and cidermakers.
Rebuilding the United Kingdom
This UK Government will not make a return to austerity and will
instead boost investment to rebuild Britain and lay the
foundations for growth in Northern Ireland. This includes £760
million of targeted funding for the Northern Ireland Executive,
of which £662 million is as committed in the 2024 restoration
financial package and £90 million is for capital investment.
- The UK Government today confirmed that investment in the Mid
South West and Causeway Coast and Glens City Deals will continue,
supported by a value for money assessment as part of the review
of the business cases for projects to ensure best value is being
delivered. The Mid South West and Causeway Coast and Glens Deals
deliver a combined investment from UK Government of £162 million
over 15 years to rural areas in Northern Ireland.
- The Chancellor committed the UK Government to working closely
with the Northern Ireland Executive on the Industrial Strategy,
10-year infrastructure strategy and the National Wealth Fund - to
ensure the benefits of these are felt UK-wide and as part of the
relationship reset between governments. These will mobilise
billions of pounds of investment in the UK's world-leading clean
energy and growth industries.
- The UK Government has today reaffirmed its commitment to
develop an Enhanced Investment Zone in Northern Ireland and will
continue to work closely with the Northern Ireland Executive to
develop proposals.
- The UK Government has increased funding to £37.8 million for
the Police Service of Northern Ireland's Additional Security Fund
and confirmed £8 million for the Executive Programme on
Paramilitarism and Organised Crime to ensure that people and
communities are kept safe from violence and harm.
- To support community cohesion the UK Government is providing
£730,000 of additional funding in 2025-26 to support schools in
Northern Ireland through the transformation process as they work
towards integrated status.
- Under-served parts of Northern Ireland will benefit from the
rollout of digital infrastructure enabled by over £500 million of
UK-wide investment in Project Gigabit and the Shared Rural
Network.
- A corporate tax roadmap will provide businesses with the
stability and certainty they need to make long-term investment
decisions and support our growth mission. It confirms our
competitive offer, with the lowest Corporate Tax rate in the G7
and generous support for investment and innovation.
- The UK Government will also proceed with implementing the
45%/40% rates of the theatre, orchestra, museum and galleries tax
relief from 1 April 2025 to provide certainty to businesses in
Northern Ireland's thriving cultural sector.
Repairing public finances
The Chancellor has made clear that, whilst protecting working
people with measures to reduce the cost of living, there would be
difficult decisions required. The Budget will ask businesses and
the wealthiest to pay their fair share while making taxes fairer.
This will go directly towards fixing the foundations of the UK
economy.
- The rate of Employers' National Insurance will increase by
1.2 percentage points, to 15%. The Secondary Threshold – the
level at which employers start paying national insurance on each
employee's salary – will reduce from £9,100 per year to £5,000
per year.
- The smallest businesses will be protected as the Employment
Allowance will increase to £10,500 from £5,000, allowing firms in
Northern Ireland to employ four National Living Wage workers full
time without paying national insurance on their wages.
- Capital Gains Tax will increase from 10% to 18% for those
paying the lower rate, and 20% to 24% for those paying the higher
rate.
- To encourage entrepreneurs to invest in their businesses
Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) will remain at 10% this
year, before rising to 14% on 6 April 2025 and 18% from 6 April
2026-27.
- The lifetime limit of BADR will be maintained at £1 million.
The lifetime limit of Investors' Relief will be reduced from £10
million to £1 million.
- The OBR say changes to CGT will raise over £2.5 billion a
year and the UK will continue to have the lowest CGT rate of any
European G7 country.
- Inheritance Tax thresholds will be fixed at their current
levels for a further two years until April 2030. More than 90% of
estates each year will be outside of its scope. From April 2027
inherited pensions will be subject to Inheritance Tax. This
removes a distortion which has led to pensions being used as a
tax planning vehicle to transfer wealth rather than their
original purpose to fund retirement.
- From April 2026, agricultural property relief and business
property relief will be reformed. The highest rate of relief will
continue at 100% for the first £1 million of combined business
and agricultural assets, fully protecting the majority of
businesses and farms. It will reduce to 50% after the first £1
million. Reforms will affect the wealthiest 2,000 estates each
year. Inheritance Tax reforms in total are predicted by the OBR
to raise £2 billion to support stability.
The Budget also announced a package of measures that
disincentivise activities that cause ill health, by:
- Renewing the tobacco duty escalator which increases all
tobacco duty rates by RPI+2% plus an above escalator increase to
hand rolling tobacco (totalling RPI+12%).
- Introducing a new vaping duty at a flat rate of 22p/ml from
October 2026, accompanied by a further one-off increase in
tobacco duty to maintain financial incentive to choose vaping
over smoking.
- To help tackle obesity and other harms caused by high sugar
intake, the Soft Drinks Industry Levy will increase to account
for inflation since it was last updated in 2018, and the duty
will rise in line with inflation every year going forward.
- The UK Government will also uprate alcohol duty in line with
RPI on 1 February 2025, except for most drinks in pubs
The UK Government has set out the next steps to deliver its tax
manifesto commitments in the July Statement. Having consulted on
the final policy details where appropriate, this Budget delivers
the UK Government's manifesto commitments to raise revenue to pay
for First Steps, with reforms that are underpinned by fairness,
and tackle tax avoidance by:
- A new residence-based regime will replace the current non-dom
regime from April 2025 and will be designed to attract investment
and talent to the UK.
- Offshore trusts will no longer be able to be used to shelter
assets from Inheritance Tax, and there will be transitional
arrangement in place for people who have made plans based on
current rules.
- The planned 50% reduction for foreign income in the first
year of the new regime will be removed.
- Reforms to the non-dom regime will raise a total of £12.7
billion according to the OBR.
-
The tax treatment of carried interest will be reformed by
first increasing the Capital Gains Tax rates on carried
interest to 32% and then, from April 2026, moving to a
revised regime – with bespoke rules to reflect the
characteristics of the reward.
-
The Higher Rate for Additional Dwellings surcharge of Stamp
Duty Land Tax will rise from 3 to 5%, providing those looking
to move home, or purchase their first property, with a
comparative advantage over second home buyers, landlords, and
businesses purchasing residential property.
- The UK Government will also introduce 20% VAT on education
and boarding services provided for a charge by private schools
from 1 January 2025.
The Chancellor also doubled down on fiscal responsibility through
two new fiscal rules that put the public finances on a
sustainable path and prioritise investment to support long-term
growth, and new principles of stability. Spending Reviews will be
held every two years, setting plans for at least three years to
ensure public services are always planned and improve value for
money.
One major fiscal event per year will give families and businesses
stability and certainty on tax and spending changes, while giving
the Northern Ireland Executive greater clarity for in its own
budget-setting. A Fiscal Lock will also ensure no future
government can sideline the OBR again.