What’s Changing in UK Personal Tax from April 2026?

The new UK tax year starting 6 April 2026 introduces a number of important personal tax changes. While there are no major headline rate increases, several updates will quietly increase the overall tax burden.

This guide breaks down what’s changing and what it means for you.

1. Income Tax Thresholds Remain Frozen

The UK government continues to freeze income tax thresholds:

  • Personal Allowance: £12,570
  • Basic Rate Band: £12,571 – £50,270
  • Higher Rate: £50,271 – £125,140

Why this matters

As incomes rise due to inflation, more taxpayers are pushed into higher bands — known as fiscal drag.

Result: You may pay more tax even if your income only increases slightly.

2. Dividend Tax Rates Are Increasing

From April 2026, dividend tax rates will rise by 2%:

  • Basic rate: 10.75%
  • Higher rate: 35.75%
  • Additional rate: 39.35%
  • Dividend allowance remains at: £500

Who is affected?

  • Company directors
  • Shareholders
  • Small business owners

This is one of the most significant changes and will directly increase tax on profit extraction.

3. Capital Gains Tax (CGT) – Key Update for Business Owners

Standard CGT rates remain:

  • 18% (basic rate taxpayers)
  • 24% (higher rate taxpayers)

However:

Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) increases to 18% from April 2026

Impact

  • Selling a business becomes more expensive
  • Entrepreneurs will pay more tax on exit

4. Lower Tax-Free Allowances Continue

Key allowances remain reduced:

  • Dividend Allowance: £500
  • Capital Gains Tax Allowance: £3,000

Impact

More of your investment income becomes taxable, even at lower levels.

5. Making Tax Digital (MTD) for Income Tax Begins

From 6 April 2026:

Applies to self-employed individuals & landlords earning over £50,000

Requires:

  • Digital record-keeping
  • Quarterly submissions
  • Use of compatible software

Important

This is not a tax increase, but it significantly increases compliance requirements.

6. Investment Landscape Becoming Less Tax-Efficient

The overall direction of UK tax policy is clear:

  • Higher dividend taxation
  • Reduced allowances
  • Increased tax on business disposals

Over time, investment and passive income are being taxed more heavily.

7. Other Changes to Be Aware Of

  • Work-from-home tax relief is no longer widely available
  • Benefit-in-Kind (BIK) rates (e.g., electric vehicles) are gradually increasing
  • Travel-related taxes like Air Passenger Duty are rising

What Should You Do Now?

Review Your Income Strategy

If you run a company:

  • Reassess salary vs dividends
  • Consider timing dividend payments

Use Tax-Efficient Wrappers

  • ISAs
  • Pension contributions

Plan Business Sales Early

  • BADR changes mean higher tax if you delay

Get Ready for MTD

  • Start using accounting software now
  • Avoid last-minute compliance issues

Final Thoughts

April 2026 may not look dramatic on the surface, but the reality is different.

With:

  • Frozen thresholds
  • Higher dividend tax
  • Reduced allowances

Most taxpayers will experience a gradual increase in their overall tax burden. Planning ahead is essential to stay efficient and compliant. At Pro taxman, we support individuals, directors, and investors with proactive tax planning and compliance. Get in touch today to prepare for the 2026/27 tax year with confidence.

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