OUR interactive map will reveal the exact rate YOUR council tax is set to rise next month.

Brits have been warned they face steep increases of up to 10 per cent – more than the usual five per cent – as struggling councils continue to cut services for taxpayers.

The Sun Online has used the latest data to reveal an interactive map so you can easily find out the increases in your area.

For some areas shown in grey, the information is unavailable.

The national limit on how much council tax can be raised is set by the government every year, and comes into force from April.

Each local authority then decides if it will hike it to the maximum or not.

Bills will differ depending on which council band your property falls under, with more expensive properties required to pay more council tax.

Annual council tax increases remained below one per cent between 2010 and 2015, but rose to five per cent for the first time in 2018/19.

Last month, the government again confirmed that most local authorities will be able to hike the essential bill by five per cent.

This equates to £103 extra a year for the typical Band D property, which is currently £2,065

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However, four councils were given special permission to up bills by as much as 10 per cent: Thurrock, Woking, Slough and Birmingham.

This could see the same annual bill increase by £206.50.

Those in Birmingham are now going to be faced with a soaring 9.3 per cent bill as their ‘bankrupt’ local authority struggles to cope.

The average household will be forking out an extra £177.94 per year to accommodate the cash-strapped council.

Communities Secretary, Michael Gove, has even allowed Birmingham Council to increase the tax up to a whopping 21 per cent over the next two years.

Elsewhere in the country, people in Slough are due to be hit by a 7.9 per cent leap from next month.

What support is available?

Single people

Retirees

  • If you receive the Guarantee Credit element of Pension Credit, you could get a 100% discount.

Low-income households

Challenging your tax band

Section 13A relief

  • You can make an application for what is called “discretionary relief” for your council tax bill by filling out a Section 13A application.
  • This means councils can reduce or completely wipe off a council tax debt you might have.

It follows the council officials declaring themselves in an eye-watering £430million worth of debt.

Meanwhile Thurrock residents are expected to battle a 7.5 per cent hike after the council admitted to owing £1.5billion.

Both Slough and Thurrock have been given special permission to double their rates by up to 10 per cent.

And, in Croydon, London, the authority has been allowed to up its yearly council tax up to 15 per cent.

‘Necessary decision’

The capital’s average hike for Band D households will by five per cent, or £1,422 more per financial year.

Metropolitan districts outside London will see an average annual increase of 5.4 per cent to £1,837, while bills in unitary counties with no districts will rise five per cent to £1,886.

Meanwhile, the average bill in other county areas will increase by five per cent to £1,643, with districts in these areas adding an additional £266.

Sam Corcoran, leader of Cheshire East Council and vice-chairman of the CCN, said: “County authorities face a £1.1billion budget shortfall over the next two years.

“With council tax now accounting for two-thirds of the average county authority’s funding, we have little choice but to take the difficult but necessary decision to raise council tax by 4.99 per cent to continue to protect services and ward off the threat of financial insolvency in the future.”

How councils are set to bump up taxes in April

Barking and Dagenham – 4.99%

Barnet – 4.98%

Barnsley – 4.99%

Bath and NE Somerset – 4.99%

Bedford – 4.99%

Bexley – 4.99%

Birmingham

Blackburn – 4.99%

Blackpool – 4.99%

Bolton

Bournemouth – 4.99%

Bracknell Forest – 4.99%

Bradford 4.99%

Brent 4.99%

Brighton and Hove 4.99%

Bristol 4.99%

Bromley 4.99%

Buckinghamshire 4.99%

Bury 4.99%

Calderdale 4.99%

Cambridgeshire 4.99%

Camden

Central Beds 4.99%

Cheshire East 4.99%

Cheshire West 4.99%

City of London

Cornwall 4.99%

Coventry 4.99%

Croydon 4.99%

Cumberland Council 4.99%

Darlington 4.99%

Derby 4.99%

Derbyshire 4.99%

Devon 4.99%

Doncaster 4.99%

Dorset 4.99%

Dudley 4.99%

Durham 4.99%

Ealing 4.99%

East Riding 4.99%

East Sussex 4.99%

Enfield 4.99%

Essex 4.99%

Gateshead

Gloucestershire 4.99%

Greenwich 4.99%

Hackney

Halton 4.99%

Hammersmith & Fulham 4.99%

Hampshire 4.99%

Haringey 4.99%

Harrow 4.99%

Hartlepool 2.99%

Havering 4.99%

Herefordshire 4.99%

Hertfordshire 4.99%

Hillingdon 4.99%

Houslow 4.99%

Hull 4.99%

Isle of Wight 4.99%

Isle of Scilly

Islington 4.99%

Kensington & Chelsea 4.99%

Kent 4.99%

Kingston Upon Thames 4.99%

Kirklees 4.99%

Knowsley 4.99%

Lambeth 4.99%

Lancashire 4.99%

Leeds 4.98%

Leicester 4.99%

Leicestershire 4.99%

Lewisham 4.99%

Lincolnshire 4.99%

Liverpool 4.99%

Luton 4.99%

Manchester 4.99%

Medway

Merton 4.99%

Midldesborough 4.99%

Milton Keynes 4.99%

Newcastle 4.99%

Newham(a) 4.99%

Norfolk 4.99%

North East Lincolnshire

North Lincolnshire

North Somerset 4.99%

North Tyneside 4.99%

North Yorkshire 4.99%

North Northamptonshire 4.99%

Northumberland 4.99%

Nottingham 4.99%

Nottinghamshire 4.84%

Oldham 4.99%

Oxfordshire 4.99%

Peterborough 4.99%

Plymouth 4.99%

Portsmouth 4.99%

Reading 4.99%

Redbridge 4.99%

Redcar and Cleveland 4.99%

Richmond

Rochdale 4.99%

Rotherham 3.5%

Rutland 4.99%

Salford 4.99%

Sandwell 4.99%

Sefton 4.99%

Sheffield

Shropshire 4.99%

Slough

Solihull 4.99%

Somerset 4.99%

South Gloucestershire 4.99%

South Tyneside 4.95%

Southampton 4.99%

Southend 4.99%

Southwalk 4.99%

St. Helens

Staffordshire 4.99%

Stockport 4.99%

Stockton-on-Tees

Stoke 4.99%

Suffolk 4.99%

Sunderland 4.99%

Surrey 4.99%

Sutton 4.99%

Swindon 4.99%

Tameside 4.99%

Telford and Wrekin 4.99%

Thurrock 7.99%

Torbay 4.75%

Tower Hamlets 4.99%

Trafford 4.99%

Wakefield 4.99%

Walsall 4.99%

Waltham Forest 4.99%

Wandsworth

Warrington 4.98%

Warwickshire 4.99%

West Berkshire 4.99%

West Northamptonshire 4.99%

West Sussex 4.99%

Westminster 4.99%

Westmorland and Furness 4.99%

Wigan 4.99%

Wiltshire 4.99%

Windsor and Maidenhead 4.99%

Wirral 4.99%

Wokingham

Wolverhampton 4.99%

Worcestershire 4.99%

York 4.99%

CASH-STRAPPED

And Roger Gough, Conservative leader of Kent County Council and CCN’s spokesman for children’s services, said: “This month’s Budget confirmed that the public finances remain extremely tight.

“Therefore we need to have an honest discussion with all main political parties as we head into the general election on what councils can reasonably be expected to deliver, in a climate where substantive extra funds are unlikely and both demand and costs are set to rise.”

Shaun Davies, Labour chairman of the Local Government Association, explained how councils have made the “difficult choice” to raise bills because they “desperately need funding”.

He added that it would be “unsustainable” not to hike prices as the cost of living and pressure on services continue to increase.

Meanwhile, a Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities spokesperson added they have announced £600million in support packages for council across England.

READ MORE SUN STORIES

They also stated they will be increasing the yearly fund by 7.5 per cent – £64.7billion.

“Councils are responsible for their own finances and set council tax levels, but we have been clear they should be mindful of cost-of-living pressures,” they added.

2

136 local authorities will be increasing council tax by 4.99% in April

2

136 local authorities will be increasing council tax by 4.99% in April

This post first appeared on thesun.co.uk

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