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Hilesh Chavda’s series on tax & estate planning | IV. The 2021 Budget: great expectations

Hilesh Chavda, Private Client Partner at Spencer-West LLP, reviews and sets the context for key provisions within the March 2021 budget.

The country waited with bated breath as the Chancellor delivered his budget on 3 March 2021. Cutting through the rhetoric, what does it all mean for personal finances and international investment? Was it worth the wait?

Opening remarks 

In his opening remarks, Rishi Sunak said that he would do “whatever it takes” during the pandemic but he also highlighted the “acute” damage that the pandemic had done to the economy. These two sentiments were found throughout his budget.

Was the Chancellor a not so mysterious benefactor? 

In essence the Chancellor was generous in his budget by extending furlough and business support without making significant tax increases. However, he made some changes to increase the tax take with a warning that painful decisions will need to be made in the future.

Only changes that would be incorporated into the next Finance Bill were announced. Further tax-related consultations are to be published on 23 March 2021. The budget was not particularly controversial, save perhaps for the increase in corporation tax.

There were no CGT increases and no introduction of wealth tax, yet. It will be interesting to see what is published at the end of March.

Key points at a glance 

Corporation tax

Tax on company profits will rise from 19% to 25% in April 2023. Those with profits of less than £50,000 will be taxed at 19%, with the rate tapering up to 25% for companies’ whose profits are above £250,000.

Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)

The SDLT holiday on properties worth up to £500,000, due to end on 31 March 2021 has been extended to 30 June 2021. The nil rate band will then reduce to £250,000 until 30 September. After that the nil rate band will return to the usual £125,000.

Capital gains tax (CGT)

Again, there was no increase in CGT rates as many predicted or feared. Instead, the annual exempt allowance will be frozen at its current level of £12,300 for individuals and £6,150 for trusts until 2026.

Inheritance tax (IHT)

No huge rewrite of the IHT rules. The status quo continues with confirmation that the nil rate band will remain at £325,000 and the residence nil-rate band will continue to be £175,000.

Wealth tax

No sign of wealth tax. Many will breathe a sigh of relief, I am sure.

Income tax

There is no income tax increase, but more people will end up paying income tax. The income tax thresholds will rise from their current levels in line with inflation in April 2021. They will then remain at that level until April 2026. The personal allowance (the point at which people start paying tax) will remain at £12,570 until April 2026 and the higher rate will be £50,270.

The future 

As the Chancellor alluded to, not so subtly, there are some difficult decisions to make in the coming years. Tax rises and redesigns are not off the table.

The government will be publishing tax-related consultations on 23 March. It will be interesting to see what they say and may give us a better picture of what the tax landscape will look like in the coming years.

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Hilesh Chavda, Private Client Partner, Spencer-West LLP | + 44 (0)20 7925 8080 | hilesh.chavda@spencer-west.com

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One of a pair of screens depicting scenes from the highly popular novel, Romance of the West Chamber, China, 18th-19th century; the story recounts star-crossed lovers, and in this panel Cui Yingying, the daughter of a retired chancellor, prays on a moonlit night

Hans Holbein the Younger, German, Thomas Wriothesley (1505–1550), First Earl of Southampton, circa 1535; Wriothesley was Lord Chancellor and Keeper of the Great Seal, he acted as Henry VIII's Executor and as Privy Counsellor to Edward VI

John Doyle, Mistake and No Mistake, A Scene at Shanklin, Isle of Wight, print, 1834; Lord Chancellor Brougham is confronted by three individuals keen to present him with a prepared address having made out to the inn keeper that they were important visitors, Brougham had left instruction that he was only to be disturbed by King George IV's messengers

Book cover, Italian, Sienese painter; decorated with the chancellor, the clerk, and a purveyor at their accounts. Inscribed: "Book of the income and expenses of the Biccherna of the commune of Siena from the first of July to the first of January, 1343"

Burse, circa. 1714–27, British; made to contain the king's Great Seal and part of the insignia of office of the Keeper of the Great Seal (the post often contained within that of the Lord High Chancellor) - one of the most elaborate symbols associated with this role, this burse dates from the reign of King George I

Barthel Beham, German, Chancellor Leonhard von Eck (1480–1550), oil on spruce, 1527; von Eck, was Chancellor to the Catholic Bavarian Duke, William IV, and a powerful opponent of the Reformation

Silver tureen with cover, Paris, 1775-76, Jacques-Nicolas Roettiers; the tureen came from a service purchased in 1805 by Chancellor Robert R. Livingston (1746–1813) from Governor Morris (1752–1816), American politician and diplomat