In the UK we enjoy one of the most complex tax regimes in the world.
Combined with the cost of living crisis and volatile markets, it is essential to take stock of the complexities and the opportunities the UK tax system affords.
As plenty has been written about pension allowances and taxation, this article will be a high-level canter through some of the more well-known, and some of the less well-known, joys of personal taxation within the UK tax system.
So, what does the UK tax landscape look like? Well, we know that in the UK income is taxed more than capital, therefore setting the right tax strategy could reap dividends (pun intended).
We know that the sanctity of marriage and civil partnerships are favoured by tax legislation.
We know there are concerns about evasion and avoidance – the obvious difference between the two being that evasion is illegal and avoidance legal. An Isa, for example, is simply a statute approved tax-avoidance savings vehicle.
Being aware of legislation, using tried and tested planning techniques and utilising those all-important allowances, exemptions and reliefs are the key to maximising tax-related opportunities.
Allowances and exemptions
Let’s start with a few of the more well-known allowances available to us and how they are assessed against income, capital, or both.
If added together the current allowances, and one exemption, total £49,010 this tax year. In the 2020-21 tax year the total figure was £55,570 – so we have seen a 13 per cent reduction.
Why? The freezing of tax bands and the reduction of the capital gains tax allowance and dividend allowance all play their part.
Let’s take a closer look each of these categories.
The personal allowance
- Dictates the amount of income you can earn before you must pay tax.
- Standard personal allowance for 2023-24: £12,570 (can be higher if you claim marriage allowance or blind person’s allowance).
- Frozen until 2027-28 (effectively reducing the real value of the personal allowance back to the 2013/14 level).
Marriage allowance
- Claimed if you are in a marriage or civil partnership.
- A partner earning less than the standard personal allowance can transfer £1,260 of their personal allowance to a basic rate-paying partner, saving them £252 in tax.
- Can be back-dated up to four years, resulting in tax savings totalling £1,256.
Trading and property allowances
- Up to £1,000 each tax year in respect of trading and property income.
- If you have both types of income, you can double-up and get a £1,000 allowance for each.
- Aimed at the 'casual' trader, being useful for sole traders, the self-employed and 'the sharing economy' – AirBnB, eBay etc.
- If you earn less than £1,000, from one or more trades, it can be tax-exempt. You may not need to report these earnings to HMRC or pay national insurance on the income.
- Note, if your expenses are more than your income it may be beneficial to claim expenses instead of the allowances.
Personal savings allowance
- Allows savings of up to £1,000 a year in tax-free interest.
- Basic rate taxpayers get £1,000, higher-rate taxpayers £500 and additional rate taxpayers do not benefit.
- Includes interest received from bank and building society accounts, credit unions, National Savings and Investments, purchased annuities, collective investments, government and company bonds.
Lower earners can earn up to £18,570 a year tax-free when combined with the £5,000 starting rate for savings: £12,570 + £5,000 + £1,000 = £18,570.
Isas should be maxed out as any interest received does not count towards the personal savings allowance.
Starting rate for savings
- A separate savings-related allowance (in addition to personal allowance and the personal savings allowance).
- Allows up to £5,000 in savings interest completely tax-free.
- Every £1 of other income earned above the personal allowance (£12,570) reduces the starting rate for savings by £1.
If you have non-savings income of £13,570 a year, you can earn a further £5,000 in interest and pay no tax (£4,000 from the starting rate for savings and £1,000 from the personal savings allowance).
Capital gains tax allowance
- A tax on the profit from disposing of an asset that has increased in value.
- A steady reduction in CGT was announced in 2022, as shown below.
- CGT rates of tax are still lower than income tax rates, especially for additional rate taxpayers.
To counter the effect of the lower CGT allowance, there are many actions we can undertake, for example:
- Utilise losses from previous years to counter the lower allowances.
- Maximise Isa and pension contributions.
- Use spouse/civil partner’s allowance.
- Bed & Isa /pension. Assuming realising a gain, or loss, is acceptable.
- Bed & spouse/civil partner. Again, assuming realising a gain, or loss, is acceptable.
- Bed & trust. By ‘passing over’ capital gains by way of a gift into a discretionary trust, trustees can claim holdover relief. Note: trustees' CGT rates are higher than those of individuals and trustees receive half the individual exemption.
- Defer CGT by investing gains in an EIS.
Dividend allowance
- For distribution of profits by a corporation to its shareholders.
- Dividend allowance was also reduced alongside CGT, starting in 2022-23.
- This tax year individuals can receive up to £1,000 of dividend income tax-free (to reduce further in the 2024-25 tax year to £500).
Dividend rates of taxation are still less than those for income tax.
The personal savings allowance, starting rate band for savings and the dividend allowance all form part of an individual’s basic or higher-rate tax bands.
They are not in addition to these bands and can potentially push other income into higher rate brackets.
This reinforces the need to disclose all forms of income to HMRC even if the income received is within these allowances.
Mind the tax traps
As income increases above certain thresholds, allowances are lost and create tax traps, which increase the effective rate of tax an individual pays.
As well as the loss of the starting rate for savings, at £17,570, and the halving or loss of the personal savings allowance for higher-rate and additional-rate taxpayers, there are also the following traps to be considered: