THE typical household will be £100 worse off from 1 April — as new tax rules kick in.

Most will be hammered by stealth taxes, inflation and higher council taxes.

The typical household will be £100 worse off from 1 April

1

The typical household will be £100 worse off from 1 AprilCredit: Getty

But the lowest income households will gain £500 in increased benefits and a hike in the living wage.

The richest tenth will be £1,500 worse off as a result of higher taxes.

As the new financial year starts, the Resolution Foundation said the income tax bands freeze will raise an extra £25billion by 2028, nearly three times original estimates.

Commenting on this stealth tax raid, the economic think tank said: “High inflation has pushed up the projected revenue take from the Government’s personal tax threshold freeze to £25 billion a year – almost triple the amount forecast when the freeze was introduced.”

When will the £900 cost of living payment be paid?
Thousands of households can get £250 cost of living payment - how to apply

Economist Adam Corlett warned “difficult decisions on tax and spending” lay ahead. 

Meanwhile, council tax will rise by an average 5.1 per cent, with some bills now topping £2,000.

Labour blasted: “Across the country, families tell me that they feel worse off and that nothing is working better than it did 13 years ago when the Tories came to power.”

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

SMALL CAP SHARE IDEAS: Bloomsbury Publishing

In commercial terms, there have been undoubted winners and losers from the…

Benjamin bunny error 50p coin sells for £255 on eBay – how to spot one in your change

A RARE 50P error coin has sold for £255, all because a…

Ofcom proposes new rules for mobile companies to introduce mandatory roaming alerts for customers to avoid shock bills

Phone users will now have to be warned about any roaming charges…

‘Sandwich generation’ of 35 to 50-year-olds are footing the bill for those who don’t work, the Bank of England’s former chief economist says

A ‘sandwich generation’ aged between 35 and 50 is footing the bill…