The UK tax take for April and May 2025 reached £142.8 billion – up £8.6bn compared to the same period in 2024. This growth was driven mainly by higher receipts from income tax, National Insurance contributions (NICs), and VAT, which brought in £6.1bn more than last year.
Income tax, capital gains tax (CGT), and NICs totalled £84bn in May 2025, rising from £77.9bn in May 2024. A third of that growth came from employers’ NICs alone, which jumped by nearly £2bn to £10.66bn, following April’s 1.2 percentage point increase and the reduction of the secondary threshold.
If this trend holds, the Treasury may meet its projected ÂŁ24bn gain from the NICs hike, helping to plug the estimated ÂŁ22bn fiscal gap. However, rising employment costs are prompting some businesses to consider job cuts, casting doubt on sustained growth.
CGT receipts rose to £232 million in May 2025, up from £161m a year earlier. However, overall CGT income is still down year-on-year – £12.19bn has been collected since November 2024, compared to £13.7bn over the same period the previous year. The weak mergers and acquisitions market continues to dampen CGT performance.
Stamp duty land tax fell to ÂŁ918m in May 2025, down from ÂŁ1.4bn in March, following a rush to complete property transactions before the end of temporary SDLT reliefs. Inheritance tax held steady at ÂŁ701m in May but is trending higher overall, with ÂŁ1.5bn already paid this tax year.
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