Simon Evans, agricultural partner at Arnolds Keys - Irelands Agricultural, discusses the Budget and changes to Agricultural Property Relief (APR).
This week’s Budget was always going to be painful for businesses. But hidden away behind the headlines was a significant change which will have a major impact in the farming world.
Unsurprisingly, the measures that will add immediate cost to employing people have attracted the greatest attention. A rise in the National Living Wage of 6.7pc (16.3pc for 18–20 year-olds), coupled with a 1.2pc hike in employer’s national insurance contributions and a huge cut in the threshold at which employers start to pay NI, means that employing someone on full-time minimum wage is going to cost at least £2,500 a year more in April 2025 than it does now.
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But changes to Agricultural Property Relief (APR) may have the biggest impact on rural businesses.
Introduced in 1984, APR allows family farms to be passed from one generation to the next with certain exemptions limiting inheritance tax. Rachel Reeves announced on Wednesday that from 2026, only the first £1 million in value will be exempt. Everything after that will be taxed at 20pc (as opposed to the full IHT rate of 40pc).
Reeves' claim that APR "will continue to protect small family farms" is self-evidently not true expect for the very tiniest concerns: £1 million equates to only around 50 acres and a farmhouse, not including any equipment.
Given that you can’t plan for when you die, this means that every farmer should be thinking about their succession plan right now – and not trusting to luck that the farm won’t have to be broken up and sold when they are no longer around.
Whether it’s putting life assurance in place to pay for any inheritance tax liability or making exempt lifetime gifts at least seven years before they die, it is suddenly time to go to work on succession. The new tax regime comes into effect in just 17 months, which is barely enough time to mitigate its effects.
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To make things worse, Business Asset Disposal Relief (often called Entrepreneur’s Relief) was also in the Chancellor’s crosshairs. Currently this allows business owners to pay just 10pc capital taxes on the first £1 million when they dispose of their business. From April next year, the figure will be 14pc and from April 2026 it will be equalised with the basic rate of capital gains tax at 18pc.
Amid all this doom and gloom, there were just two glimmers of good news. The first is that fuel duty has been frozen for another year, including the additional 5p a litre discount which was due to come to an end in April.
And if all this economic misery is too much for you, at least you can drown your sorrows with a pint, which now costs a whole penny less than it did last week.
For more information, visit arnoldskeys.com
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