Budget 2025: The Bold, the New, and the Numbers That Actually Matter

The Chancellor dropped the Autumn Budget 2025, and yes – it came with tax rises, freezes, surcharges, and even a mileage tax for EVs (yes!).

If you don’t have time to swim through 130+ pages of HM Treasury text, here’s Experlu’s fast, punchy, everything-you-need-to-know version.

Autumn Budget 2025

 The Budget 2025 Hit List (aka “Just tell me quickly”)

  • 📈 Dividend tax is up by 2% (new rates below – hold tight…)
  • 🏠 Homes over £2m get a new annual property surcharge
  • 💷 Savings & rental income tax jumps by 2% from 2027
  • 💼 Salary-sacrifice pensions capped at £2,000 NIC relief
  • 💰 National Living Wage rockets to £12.71 from April 2026
  • 🔌 Electric vehicles charged per mile – 3p for EVs, 1.5p for plug-in hybrids
  • 👵 State Pension boosted by £575/year
  • 🚆 Rail fares, prescriptions, and fuel duty frozen
  • 👶 Two-child limit officially abolished
  • 🏗️ £120bn+ committed to building stuff (finally)

Now let’s break this down the Experlu way.

 1. The Personal Finance Shake-Up

💷 National Living Wage

From April 2026, minimum hourly pay jumps to £12.71.
Good news for employees.
A budgeting reminder for employers.

👵 State Pension

Triple Lock survives another round.
Increase: £575 per year from April 2026.

🔌 Energy Bills

Forecast shows £150 off the average bill from April 2026.
It’s not a holiday to Spain, but we’ll take it.

❄️ Cost Freezes (2026/27)

  • Rail fares: ❄️ frozen
  • Prescription charges: ❄️ frozen
  • Fuel duty: ❄️ frozen until August 2026

Basically: no extra winter surprises.

2. Dividend, Savings & Rental Income Taxes – All Going Up

📊 Dividend Tax (From April 2026)

A clean +2% rise across the board (except additional rate – that one stays put).

BandOld RateNew Rate
Basic8.75%10.75%
Higher33.75%35.75%
Additional39.35%39.35%

Dividend allowance: still £500 (generous? not really).

 🏘️ Savings & Rental Income Tax (From April 2027)

Add 2% here too. New rates:

  • 22% (basic)
  • 42% (higher)
  • 47% (additional)

Landlords and high-interest savers: you felt that one.

 3. High-Value Property Surcharge (£2m+)

Own a home worth more than £2 million?
Say hello to your new annual surcharge.

  • Starts at £2m
  • Specific rate bands coming in the Finance Bill
  • Applies only to residential property

This is the closest thing to a “mansion tax” the UK has seen.

4. Pension & Salary-Sacrifice Overhaul

From April 2029, the party ends:

  • Only the first £2,000 of salary-sacrifice pension contributions gets favourable NIC treatment.

High earners: brace yourselves.

5. Business, Employers & Investors – What’s Changing

🏗️ £120bn Capital Investment

Transport, housing, green energy, digital infrastructure – all getting new funding.

🧪 R&D Tax Framework Refresh

A modernised scheme is coming.
Details? In the 2026 Finance Bill.

🏙️ Business Rates

Targeted relief in regeneration zones and northern city-regions.

 6. EV Drivers – New Mileage Tax (From 2028)

The rumour became reality.

  • 3p per mile → fully electric cars
  • 1.5p per mile → plug-in hybrids
  • Applies on top of VED
  • System still being finalised (pay-as-you-go? annual readings? app tracking? stay tuned)

Why?
Fuel duty revenue is falling – the government wants its slice.

 7. VAT & Customs Changes

  • VAT relief scrapped for imported parcels under £135
  • Tougher VAT rules for digital and overseas sellers

Online sellers outside the UK: you’ve been warned.

 8. Welfare Changes

👶 Two-Child Limit Abolished

Universal Credit & Tax Credits no longer restricted to two children.

🎓 Youth Guarantee

Every 16–24-year-old gets access to:

  • Work
  • Training
  • Education

📚 Growth & Skills Levy

New model replacing old apprenticeship funding.

 9. Public Services & Departmental Budgets

  • Departments must make savings between 2028–29 and 2030–31
  • NHS, education, justice: funding commitments stay in place

Translation: reforms, not cuts (for now).

 10. Fiscal & Economic Outlook

📈 Growth

2025 growth revised upwards.

🧪 Productivity

Long-term productivity revised downwards → £16bn revenue gap by 2029/30.

💼 Borrowing & Debt

  • Fiscal rules met
  • Debt expected to fall as a share of GDP within five years

 FAQs – Experlu Style

1. What are the biggest tax changes?

Dividend tax, savings tax, rental income tax, the new property surcharge, and salary-sacrifice pension caps.

2. How does it impact dividend income?

Dividend tax rises to 10.75% / 35.75% / 39.35% depending on your band.

3. What’s the deal with the property surcharge?

Homes over £2m now face an annual levy.

4. What are the new savings/rental income rates?

From 2027: 22%, 42%, 47%.

5. Any good news?

Yes – wages up, pensions up, travel costs frozen, and energy bills falling.

image credit: djh.co.uk

Experlu Editorial Team
The editorial team at Experlu is comprised of seasoned financial professionals dedicated to providing high-quality content on accounting and finance. With a wealth of experience and diverse expertise, the team produces insightful articles that have established the Experlu blog as the UK's leading financial and accounting resource. The team includes accountants, auditors, and business advisors who stay updated with the latest industry developments. Their commitment to excellence ensures that Experlu remains a trusted source of information, helping readers stay informed about audit, business, finance, and tax matters.