Wednesday, 8 April 2026

April Tax Grab 2026: Reeves and HMRC's Latest Stealth Raid


 

April Tax Grab 2026: Reeves and HMRC's Latest Stealth Raid – More Pain for You, Zero Relief for Petrol or Stamp Duty

Morning, you long-suffering mugs grinding away while Rachel Reeves bangs on about “working people” and HMRC pretends it’s “modernising” the system. It’s April 2026 – new tax year, same old story: frozen thresholds, sneaky little rises, and yet another layer of bureaucratic bollocks designed to squeeze every last penny without admitting they’re hiking taxes.

Here’s the full list of what’s actually going up from April 2026 (or hitting you via stealth). I’ve stuck to the hard facts, no spin.

Personal Tax Increases Hitting Individuals

  • Dividend tax rates ↑ by 2 percentage points
    Basic rate: 8.75% → 10.75%
    Higher rate: 33.75% → 35.75%
    (Additional rate stays at 39.35%. First £500 still tax-free, but everything above gets hammered harder.)

  • Council tax ↑ average 4.9% across England
    Band D household: up £111 to £2,392 a year.
    Wales ~4.9%, Scotland 4–10% depending on council. Still the most regressive tax going – hits the poorest hardest.

  • Vehicle Excise Duty (road tax)
    Standard annual rate for post-1 April 2017 cars: £195 → £200.
    (EV “expensive car” supplement threshold rises to £50k – small mercy for posh electric buyers.)

  • Air Passenger Duty ↑ 13–15% across all bands
    Example: long-haul economy £94 → £106. Private jets get an extra 50% whack.

  • Self-employed Class 2 NICs
    Weekly rate: £3.50 → £3.65.
    Voluntary Class 3: £17.75 → £18.40.

  • Capital Gains Tax (BADR / Investors’ Relief)
    Rate jumps from 14% → 18% on qualifying business asset disposals.

  • Inheritance Tax relief caps (APR & BPR)
    100% relief now capped at combined £2.5 million per person. Anything above gets only 50% relief (effective 20% IHT hit on the excess).

  • Income tax & NI thresholds – frozen again until 2031
    Personal allowance £12,570, basic rate band £37,700. Pure stealth tax – fiscal drag pulls more of your pay into higher bands as wages creep up.

Petrol & diesel duty? No rise in April. The 5p cut is extended until end of August 2026, and the planned RPI increase for April has been cancelled. Small win – but it’s only delayed pain.

Stamp Duty Land Tax? No change this April. The mansion tax (High Value Council Tax Surcharge) doesn’t kick in until April 2028.

Business / Employer Hits

  • Employer NI secondary threshold frozen (still £5,000 a year equivalent).
    Combined with previous rate rises, this keeps dragging more wage costs onto employers as pay rises.

  • Making Tax Digital for Income Tax Self Assessment (MTD ITSA) mandatory from 6 April for sole traders/landlords with £50k+ gross qualifying income.
    Quarterly digital updates instead of one annual return = massive extra admin and software costs.

  • Energy costs for businesses – transmission charges doubling for some, adding ~5% to electricity bills.

  • Dividend tax rise hits director-shareholders hard (same rates as personal).

  • Business rates relief continuing to unwind in some sectors (retail, hospitality etc. seeing big jumps in effective bills).

Average Extra Cost Estimates (Rough but Realistic)

For a typical individual/household:

  • Council tax alone: +£111
  • Road tax: +£5
  • Dividend tax (if you take £20k–£50k in dividends): £500–£1,000+ extra depending on your tax band
  • Frozen thresholds/fiscal drag: £300–£800 a year for many middle earners as more income gets taxed at 40%
  • Total average hit for a working household with some investments/property: £400–£1,200 extra per year. Pensioners and basic-rate only folk get off lighter but still feel the council tax sting.

For businesses / self-employed:

  • MTD compliance (software, time, accountant fees): £500–£2,000+ per year for those forced in.
  • Energy bill rise: £1,000–£5,000+ depending on size.
  • Employer NI drag + minimum wage uplift (not tax but related cost): thousands for any firm with staff.
  • Average small business / sole trader: £2,000–£10,000+ extra annual burden depending on turnover, staff, and dividends taken.

This is on top of the employer NI hike from last year, the ongoing threshold freezes, and the looming MTD quarterly reporting nightmare for higher earners.

Tax does have to be taxing.


But when Reeves and HMRC quietly pile on dividend tax, council tax, road tax, and admin burdens while pretending they’re only hitting “the rich”, it’s not taxing – it’s a slow, deliberate mugging of working people and small businesses while the big corporates and civil servants get another nice quiet year.

 

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Wednesday, 1 April 2026

HMRC Stamp Duty Investigations Take 35 Months on Average


 

As per Guido:

Figures from HMRC show that in the last four years the average length of time that Stamp Duty Land tax (SDLT) investigations have taken to complete is an average of 35 months. Rayner admitted she may have paid the wrong tax on 5 September last year, only seven months ago…

The best yearly performance is a whopping 27 months, posted in the 24/25 financial year:

Tax yearAverage length of time of closed cases had taken to complete (SDLT)
2021/2231 months
2022/2339 months
2023/2443 months
2024/2527 months

Since Rayner’s operation conceded that the investigation would have to be finished before she made any attempt at the Labour leadership, the former DPM’s annoyance at HMRC for taking so long (she ‘offered to help‘ at one point) has made frequent appearances in the press.

Oh dear, 

how sad, 

never mind! 

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Saturday, 28 March 2026

Rayner is Contesting Her Stamp Duty Charge


 

The Times has been told that she has subsequently taken new legal advice which argues that she did not need to pay the higher rate of stamp duty. The new advice has been submitted to HMRC. It is understood to highlight “complexities” surrounding the trust 

 

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Thursday, 26 March 2026

Oh Lucky Jim - NS&I's "Fresh Start"


 

NS&I's "Fresh Start": They’ve Dragged Sir Jim Harra Out of Retirement – The Same Bloke Who Turned HMRC Customer Service Into a National Disgrace

Hello folks, you poor savers still hoping your Premium Bonds might actually pay out one day, or that your NS&I account won’t mysteriously vanish into the ether. While HMRC continues its proud tradition of hanging up on deadline day, chasing grannies for £47, and taking two years to cough up refunds, the government has come up with a brilliant solution to the growing crisis at National Savings & Investments (NS&I).

They’ve hauled Sir Jim Harra – the former First Permanent Secretary at HMRC – out of retirement to take over as interim chief executive. Because nothing says “fresh start” quite like appointing the man who presided over the absolute collapse of HMRC’s customer service.

During Harra’s reign at HMRC, helpline wait times ballooned to a record 23 minutes, with around a third of calls going unanswered. MPs on the Public Accounts Committee accused the department of deliberately degrading phone services to force people online – a claim Harra dismissed as “baseless”. Trust in the system? Shattered. Backlogs? Biblical. Refunds? Forget it. Sick days? Half a million and counting. But sure, let’s give this bloke the keys to NS&I, which is currently drowning in a £400m–£470m+ scandal involving missing savings, untraceable Premium Bonds, and bereaved families unable to access relatives’ money.

NS&I – the government’s own savings bank, the one that’s supposed to be rock-solid and taxpayer-backed – has been hit by chronic failings in tracing accounts and paying out what’s owed. The previous boss, Dax Harkins, has been shown the door after a Telegraph investigation exposed the scale of the mess. Now Harra gets a three-month review to “investigate the background” and “learn lessons”.

This is peak Civil Service musical chairs. When one quango screws up spectacularly, don’t fix the underlying problems – just shuffle in another career mandarin who failed at the last gig. Harra couldn’t sort HMRC’s phones, portals, or basic competence, but he’s somehow the right man to steady NS&I’s ship? Pull the other one.

The message to every saver is crystal clear: your money might be “100% safe” in theory, but good luck actually getting your hands on it if the system loses track. The same bureaucratic incompetence that leaves you on hold for an hour at HMRC is now running the savings bank where millions of ordinary people park their cash, Premium Bonds, and ISAs.

And the real kicker? While Harra was busy letting HMRC customer service rot, the department was still hammering taxpayers with penalties, trivial demands, and MTD quarterly reporting burdens. Now he gets another cushy interim role with presumably another fat pension top-up on the way.

This isn’t leadership. It’s institutional protection racket. The Civil Service looks after its own – even when they’ve demonstrably failed at the job.

But when the same clown who wrecked HMRC’s service gets rewarded with another top job at NS&I while savers can’t access their own money? That’s not taxing – that’s taking the absolute piss out of the British public.

Amazon “Government Incompetence Survival Kit” Suggestions
(affiliate links – because you’ll need these while waiting for your savings to reappear)


HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Monday, 23 March 2026

MTD Deadline Fast Approaching - Less Than 10% Have Signed Up


 

HMRC has confirmed 864,000 people must comply with Making Tax Digital for Income Tax from 6 April 2026. Only 81,000 have signed up. That is fewer than 1 in 10. If you are a landlord or sole trader earning over £50,000, the deadline is weeks away — not months.

If you're a landlord or sole trader with qualifying income over £50k, you should register and get compatible software sorted immediately—penalties for late quarterly updates start after April 2026. Check your eligibility and sign-up on GOV.UK. 

 HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"

Wednesday, 18 March 2026

Angela Rayner and the Labour Party's Tax Advice Bill


It has emerged that Angela Rayner has had specialist tax advice covered by the Labour Party.

The party commissioned leading barrister Jonathan Peacock KC to review Rayner's tax position, focusing primarily on whether she had underpaid stamp duty on her £700,000–£800,000 flat purchase in Hove, East Sussex. This advice also covered related matters such as council tax, capital gains tax, and inheritance tax implications. 

Peacock reportedly spent up to five days on the task, delivering draft advice on 1 September 2025 and final advice the following day. Rayner had requested the legal input from the party, and senior Labour officials arranged for Peacock's involvement. The bill was paid by party headquarters — a decision that has drawn sharp criticism from some within Labour itself, who have described it as a "shameful use of party resources" amid the party's post-election financial pressures, including a reported £3.8 million deficit.

The exact cost remains undisclosed, but tax and legal experts estimate it could run into tens of thousands of pounds. 

No declaration appears in the parliamentary Register of Members’ Financial Interests for this benefit. As of early 2026, searches of the register (available via parliament.uk and monitoring sites) show no entry under relevant categories like gifts, benefits, donations, or miscellaneous support from the Labour Party.

There are also no public indications that Rayner has reported the value of this advice as a benefit in kind to HMRC. Under UK tax rules (Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003), payments by an employer or equivalent body (here, the party in relation to her deputy leadership role) for personal legal advice are generally taxable unless tied directly to work duties. 

Since this concerned her private property and family trust arrangements — unrelated to parliamentary or official responsibilities — analysts argue it would likely be treated as a taxable benefit, potentially leaving Rayner liable for income tax (and possibly National Insurance) on its value.

This revelation comes against the backdrop of Rayner's earlier stamp duty controversy. She admitted underpaying around £40,000 in higher-rate stamp duty on the Hove flat (treated as a second home due to trust arrangements for her children), self-referred to the prime minister's ethics adviser, and cooperated with HMRC. The ministerial standards probe found she breached the code, contributing to her resignation as deputy prime minister, housing secretary, and deputy Labour leader.

While the original tax underpayment was settled (with potential penalties), this party-funded advice has raised fresh questions about transparency, declarations, and possible additional tax liabilities.

Doubtless HMRC will now be aware of this, even if she hasn't yet declared it.

HMRC Is Shite (www.hmrcisshite.com), also available via the domain www.hmrconline.com, is brought to you by www.kenfrost.com "The Living Brand"