UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves used her November 26, 2025 Budget to introduce one of the most significant tax shifts in over a decade, a package designed to raise £26 billion by the end of the decade without increasing headline income tax, NICs or VAT. Reeves framed the plan as a break from the austerity era, insisting that stabilising the public finances required “fair and necessary choices” focused on high earners rather than broad cuts to public services.
Fiscal Drag at the Center of the Strategy
At the core of the overhaul is an extension of the personal tax threshold freeze until April 2031. By keeping thresholds fixed while wages rise with inflation, the government expects nearly one million additional taxpayers to enter the higher-rate band and several thousand more to fall into the top additional-rate bracket. Reeves defended the approach as a pragmatic alternative to raising headline tax rates, arguing that it ensures the burden falls primarily on those with rising incomes rather than workers on lower wages.
New High-Value Property Surcharge
A central feature of the Budget is the introduction of a high-value property surcharge, widely described as a “mansion tax”, for homes in England worth over £2 million. The annual charge will begin in April 2028, starting with £2,500 for properties between £2 million and £2.5 million, and reaching £7,500 for properties valued at £5 million or more. The measure is aimed at wealthier homeowners and is expected to deliver a steady new revenue stream through the next decade.
Changes to Pension, Savings and Investment Rules
Sweeping adjustments to pension contributions and investment taxation were also announced. From 2029, the National Insurance relief available through salary sacrifice pension schemes will be capped at £2,000 per year. Any contributions beyond that limit will attract standard NICs, a change that will largely affect higher-income earners who have used these schemes to reduce tax liabilities.
Dividend, property and savings income will all see tax increases of two percentage points, a shift that coincides with a reduced cash ISA limit.

The annual tax-free cash ISA allowance will fall from £20,000 to £12,000 for most savers, while the remaining £8,000 of the allowance will be directed into a new “British ISA” designed to channel more investment into domestic markets. Reeves is positioning this as both a revenue measure and an attempt to boost UK capital markets.
Further tightening comes through reforms to capital gains tax. Businesses sold to employee ownership trusts will no longer qualify for full CGT relief; instead, the relief will be halved to 50%. Treasury officials say the change reflects an effort to balance support for employee ownership with the need for fiscal sustainability.
A High-Tax Future Acknowledged
Reeves has been explicit that the tax burden will continue to rise across the decade, reaching a projected 38% of GDP by 2030–31, the highest level on record. She argues that the increase is unavoidable given the need to maintain public services, reduce borrowing and create room for investment without repeating the austerity-driven strategy of previous governments. The Budget, she said, demonstrates that long-term economic stability can be achieved through targeted taxation rather than deep cuts.
Overall, the Chancellor’s plan marks a decisive shift in how the UK intends to raise revenue, with the weight of new measures placed firmly on higher earners, property wealth, investment income and pension strategies that primarily benefit top-income households. Reeves presented the package as the only credible route to restoring fiscal health while avoiding renewed austerity, a message aimed at both markets and a public weary of economic stagnation.

