Now the dust has settled from the recent mini-budget, some of the tax changes are going to be important and relevant to investors
What has changed?
The chancellor announced that the annual CGT exemption will be cut by over half from £12,300 in the current tax year to £6,000 in 2023/24 and £3,000 in 2024/25. Any profits (‘gains’) that exceed the exemption will be taxed at the existing rates of 20% for higher and additional rate taxpayers and 10% for some basic-rate taxpayers (28% or 18% on gains from residential property).
In practice……
This means for a higher rate taxpayer making a gain in each tax year the position would be as follows:
Amount of Gain Each Year | Tax payable 2022/23 | Tax payable 2023/24 | Tax payable 2024/25 |
---|---|---|---|
£20,000 | £1,540 | £2,800 | £3,400 |
It is worth noting that Trusts currently have half of the CGT allowance for individuals so the new rates for them will now be £3,000 for 2023/24 and £1,500 for 2024/25.
There are several ways to mitigate CGT, including investing in an ISA, making the most of the CGT exemption each tax year, and using losses to reduce your gain.
What has changed?
The annual dividend allowance – the amount of dividend income you do not have to pay tax on – will fall from £2,000 in the current tax year to £1,000 in 2023/24 and £500 in 2024/25.
The rate of dividend tax will remain at 8.75% for basic-rate taxpayers, 33.75% for higher-rate taxpayers and 39.35% for additional rate taxpayers.
What does it mean for investors?
This means for a higher rate taxpayer receiving a dividend in each tax year the position would be as follows:
Amount of dividend each year | Tax payable 2022/23 | Tax payable 2023/24 | Tax payable 2024/25 |
---|---|---|---|
£5,000 | £1,012.50 | £1,350 | £1,518.75 |
What has changed?
The additional-rate income tax threshold will be lowered from £150,000 to £125,140 from April 2023.
The personal allowance (the amount you can earn each year before you start paying income tax) and the higher-rate income tax threshold have been frozen at their 2021/22 levels of £12,570 and £50,270, respectively, for an additional two years until 2028.
Over a nine-year period from 2019/20, the personal allowance and higher-rate tax thresholds will have risen by just £70 and £270, respectively.
What does it mean for investors?
Lowering the additional-rate income tax threshold will result in more people paying the 45% top rate of income tax. Someone earning £150,000 could face an income tax bill of £53,703 in 2023/24, up from £52,460 currently.
Meanwhile, freezing the personal allowance and higher-rate tax threshold could see more people drifting into higher tax bands because of inflation. An individual who earned £50,000 in 2021, and whose income rises in line with actual and forecast consumer price index (CPI) inflation, could see their income tax bill rise from £7,486 to £15,825 by 2028.
One way to potentially reduce your income tax bill is to save into a pension. If your salary and/or bonus means you cross into a higher tax band, making a personal pension contribution could mean your adjusted net income falls below the threshold and potentially avoids higher or additional rate tax.
What has changed?
The IHT nil-rate band and residence nil-rate band have also been frozen for another two years until 2028. The IHT nil-rate band has remained at £325,000 since 2009. Over this period, the average UK house price has surged by 77% from £154,006 to £273,135 in 2022, according to Nationwide.
By 2028, families will have missed out on almost 20 years of inflation-linked increases. The residence nil-rate band – an additional allowance for those who pass on their main residence to children or grandchildren when they die – was last increased in April 2020 to its current level of £175,000.
What does it mean for investors?
Freezing the thresholds could result in more families being caught in the IHT net. In the last decade alone, IHT receipts have rocketed from £2.9bn in 2011/12 to £6.1bn in 2021/22.
With all of these changes, a little planning will go a long way - it is important that actions are taken now to make the most of the current allowances before they change and plan to make the most of future opportunities to reduce tax payable.
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