The Conservatives will cut taxes for 700,000 families by an
average of £1,500 as Labour continue to refuse ruling out tax
rises of £2,094 per working household to plug their financial
black hole.
We will do this by raising the threshold at which people start to
pay the High Income Child Benefit Tax Charge (HICBC) to £120,000,
up from £60,000 currently.
And to end the unfairness that means single earner households can
start paying the tax charge when a household with two working
parents and a much higher total income can keep Child Benefit in
full, we will move to a household rather than individual basis
for assessing the tax charge.
Single-earner households and households where one individual
earns substantially more than the other will be the biggest
beneficiaries.
The announcement underlines the Conservatives' commitment to
rewarding aspiration, boosting households' financial security and
incentivising work by allowing hard-working families keep more of
what they earn.
It builds on our tax-cutting plan announced in April to raise the
threshold at which individuals start to pay the Child Benefit tax
charge from £50,000 to £60,000.
These changes have taken 170,000 families out of paying the tax
charge, and mean that almost half a million families gain an
average of £1,260 to help with the cost of raising their children
this year.
Chancellor of the Exchequer, said:
“Today we have announced a £1,500 tax cut for parents to boost
families' financial security and give them more money to spend on
the things that matter most.
“Raising the next generation is the most important job any of us
can do so it's right that, as part of our clear plan to bring
taxes down, we are reducing the burden on working families.
“There is a clear choice for voters at this election: bold action
to cut taxes for working families under the Conservatives, or a
£2094 tax rise to fill Labour's £38.5 billion spending black
hole”.
The pledge is fully funded, paid for by clamping down on tax
avoidance, which is expected to raise a total of £6 billion.
Labour have said they would raise a similar amount from tax
avoidance, but have said they will spend it on other
things.
Notes to Editors:
Costing and funding
· Our
policy to end the unfairness of the High Income Child Benefit
Charge has been fully funded and costed. Increasing the
threshold to £120,000 and the taper rate to £160,000 will cost
£1.3bn in 2029/30. It will be paid for by our previously
announced plan to raise £6 billion from further clamping down on
tax avoidance and evasion. So far, of this £6 billion we have
committed:
o £1 billion for National Service
o £2.4 billion for the Triple Lock Plus
o £60 million for 30 news towns
· The Labour
Party has said it will raise £5.1 billion from tax avoidance and
evasion by the end of the Parliament. It has decided to spend
this money on other things.
In April 2024, the Conservatives reformed the
High-Income Child Benefit Charge, cutting tax for half a million
families:
· In April, the
Conservatives reformed the High-Income Child Benefit Charge,
cutting tax for nearly half a million families. As of
April 2024, the Conservatives raised the threshold for the
High-Income Child Benefit Charge from £50,000 to £60,000 and
halved the rate so that it is not paid in full until you earn
over £80,000 - estimated to support nearly half a million
families with an average gain of up to £1,260 in 2024-25 towards
the costs of raising their children (HM Treasury, Spring
Budget, 6 March 2024, link).
· Reforms to
the High Income Child Benefit Charge are predicted to boost
economic growth and support jobs across the country. The
OBR estimated that the changes to the HICBC we introduced this
year will increase economic growth and increase the average hours
worked by workers employees by an amount equivalent to 10,000
full-time employees (Office for Budget Responsibility,
Economic and Fiscal Outlook, March 2024, link).
However, the current system is still unfair, which is
why the Conservatives have set out a clear plan to deliver the
support working families across the country
need:
· We will end
the unfairness of the High-Income Child Benefit Charge by moving
to a system based of households, cutting taxes for 700,000
households by an average of £1,500 per year. We will
ensure that the High-Income Child Benefit Charge is only paid by
households with a combined income of more than £120,000 per year
and increase the threshold at which Child Benefit is fully
withdrawn to £160,000 per household.
· Following
consultation, we will legislate and deliver these changes by
Autumn 2025. Moving to a household basis requires
significant reform to how HMRC administers the High-Income Child
Benefit Charge and so we will first launch a consultation to
resolve the key design issues to deliver the new system by April
2026.