Yesterday, the Chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, delivered his Spring Budget. He talked about the different measures taken by the government, involving property tax, holiday lets as well as non-dom tax status.
General State of the Economy
Jeremy Hunt started delivering his budget talking about the state of the British economy, dealing with the financial crisis, the pandemic and the energy crisis. He expects the economy to grow by 0.8% this year and 1.9% in 2025. Inflation is expected to fall below the government’s 2% target in just a few months time according to Hunt, down from 4% in January.
Non-Dom Tax Status
During his budget, the chancellor confirmed the government will abolish the non-dom tax status and it will be replaced by a “modern, simpler and fairer” system from April 2025. The status is used by people who are resident in the UK, but who have certain overseas links and are not domiciled in the UK for tax purposes as they only pay UK tax on money made in the country, but not on any world wide income.
Property tax and Holiday Lets
Jeremy Hunt said the government will reduce the high rate of property capital gains tax from 28% to 24%.He also announced the abolition of stamp duty relief for those buying more than one dwelling. During his budget, the Chancellor confirmed that he plans to scrap the furnished holiday lets regime in April 2025. He said the Furnished Holiday Lettings regime was causing a ‘distortion’ in the housing market and depriving local people of affordable homes.
