Updates On The UK Spring Budget 2024

For Brits, the most recent Spring Budget announcement was incredibly important, as it gave us some very key and drastic updates for tax and spending. Essentially, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt aimed to deliver lower taxes, encourage investment and improve public services. Although the elections may affect this announcement, it’s still very important for Brits, particularly those abroad, to be aware of. Martin at Spice Taxation (Company Registration No. 202133724G), has written a very in depth piece on the Spring Budget. It’s incredibly useful to hear the views of a professional tax expert, and Martin has been kind enough for me to share his thoughts here. Of course, I myself am not a UK Tax expert, so I often seek the help of professionals, such as Martin, to help me and my clients with their tax planning when necessary.

Below is Spice Taxation’s write up on the matter.

Our Thoughts on the Spring Budget – 6th March 2024
The Most Important Budget for Expatriates since 2010


“Over the years I have discovered that I am just not very good at predicting Budgets. Speculation is always rife about what a Chancellor might do in face of this and that economic and political situation, but mostly the actual announcements just tend to underwhelm and disappoint. Maybe I just crave excitement!


However, all that changed with Jeremy Hunt’s Budget on 6th March. It is likely to be the last Conservative Party Budget before the next General Election – an election which the Labour Party is widely expected to win. So, it remains to be seen how many of the announcements will find their way onto the Statute books if Labour does win. That aside, it really was an exciting Budget which promises a lot of change, much of it positive.


For much of the speech, it felt like a ‘normal budget’ with a plethora of announcements about regional incentives, funding initiatives, levelling up grants, subsidies and tax breaks for the arts etc. However, there was also a number of genuinely eye-catching and important announcements which are also relevant to expatriates.


First of all, Jeremy Hunt announced a further reduction in National Insurance paid by employees and the self-employed of 2%, from 6th April 2024. For employees, this will reduce from 10% to 8% and for the Self-Employed from 8% to 6%. For those returning to the UK, this will be welcome news.


Secondly, he announced the intention to introduce a new Individual Savings Account – the UK ISA, with an annual subscription allowance of GBP 5,000, in addition to the existing threshold of GBP 20,000. This new ISA would hold British-only assets – equities listed on the four recognised UK stock exchanges, UK corporate bonds and gilts and collectives. This will be good for UK resident savers.


Third, there were a few property tax announcements which came as a surprise:


o The marginal rate of Capital Gains Tax on the sale of residential property will reduce from 28% to 24% from 6th April 2024. This is intended to help stimulate the property market. The basic rate will remain at 18%. This is good for anyone selling, gifting or assigning an interest in UK residential property from that date.


o Multiple Dwellings Relief for Stamp Duty Land Tax is being abolished from 1st June 2024 – this was a relief that allowed you to take the average purchase price for SDLT purposes where at least two properties were being purchased in a single transaction.

o Furnished Holiday Letting status is to be abolished from 6th April 2025, with some anti-forestalling provisions which came into effect on 6th March 2024.


o The geographical scope of Agricultural Property Relief and Woodlands Relief (two Inheritance Tax incentives) will be limited to assets situated in the UK only from 6th April 2024 – those situated in the Crown Dependencies and the EEA will lose their IHT protected status.


Fourth, the VAT registration threshold will rise to GBP 90,000 from 6th April 2024, an increase of GBP 5,000, which will be welcome news for small businesses.


However, perhaps the biggest and most barnstorming announcement was the abolition of ‘non-dom’ status from 6th April 2025. The Conservative Party has been a staunch defender of the ‘non-domiciled regime’ over many years, so it was something of a surprise to see them adopt an avowed Labour Party policy. Stealing their thunder no doubt. It is a very major announcement that will impact many people.

In a nutshell, the Government plans to delink a person’s ‘domicile status’ from their UK tax outcomes, and move to a residence-based set of incentives. Consultation documents are yet to be published, but the main features of the new system will be to:

– Abolish the ‘remittance basis of taxation’ for UK resident ‘non-doms’.

– Replace it with an opt-in system that will allow, seemingly anyone – including, presumably, British nationals – to exempt their non-UK incomes and gains from UK tax for the first four years of UK residence, provided that they have been continuously non-resident for at least the 10 previous years.

– Exempt from tax the remittance of these non-UK income and gains to the UK, which will be hugely simplifying in the long run.

– Retain Overseas Workday Relief for qualifying individuals for the first 3 tax years of residence.

– Apply world-wide taxation for all individuals from the 5th year of residence in the UK.

– Introduce a thoughtful set of transitional reliefs for certain ‘non-doms’ who are already resident in the UK

– Switch away from a ‘domicile based’ system of Inheritance Tax to a residence-based system, whereby qualifying individuals switch to IHT on world-wide assets only after 10 years of residence.

Keep anyone who leaves the UK within IHT for 10 further years, which presumably also will apply to British Expatriates too. UK assets remain within Inheritance Tax at all times, regardless of residence.

We are missing a lot of technical detail here which should be answered by the Consultation Documents that the Government will be publishing shortly. So watch this space! However, whilst I have many more questions than answers at the moment, at first sight the main impacts appear to be the following:


a) Tax planning for relocation to the UK is likely to change quite a bit and these proposals could amount to a generous tax break for returning British expatriates.


b) They will also make Inheritance Tax planning potentially a lot simpler and not so reliant on subjective judgments about where a person is domiciled.


c) It might possibly result in an exemption from Inheritance Tax for a swathe of non-resident British expatriates who have already been non-resident for at least 10 years, which would be quite a result!


I am going out on a limb a little by saying that it appears the proposals will also apply to those we currently regard as ‘domiciled’ in the UK. However, surely that is the point – it is switch away from a tax system where a person’s domicile was the deciding factor, to a tax system where the deciding factor is driven by residence. This potentially bodes extremely well for British expatriates.
If this Budget does turn out to be the Conservative Party’s fiscal swansong, it is perhaps fitting that its period of Government will be bookended by a commitment to enshrine in law a statutory test for residence in 2010 at the start, and a set of announcements that displace domicile with a new regime based on that very residence test at the end. Mastering the Statutory Residence Test is clearly going to be more and more important.
Beyond this, all tax rates, thresholds and allowances for Personal Tax remain frozen, as do the rates for Corporation Tax. The dividend allowance will fall to GBP 500 from 6th April 2024 and the Capital Gains Tax Annual Exemption will fall to GBP 3,000 from the same date. Class 2 and Class 3 voluntary National Insurance Contribution rates will remain unchanged at GBP 3.45 per week and GBP 17.45 per week respectively, and the New State Pension will rise to GBP 221.20 per week (of GBP 11,502.40 per year) from 6th April 2024.”


If you would like to discuss your own circumstances in confidence or would like to be on the subscriber list for Spice Taxation’s new dedicated coverage of these breaking developments, please contact Martin at martin@spicetaxation.com or by sending a Whatsapp to +65 96650019.

I’d like to thank Martin at Spice Taxation for allowing me to share this information with my readers. I am sure that this will help many of you plan your finances in relation to UK tax.

How Did One Of History’s Smartest Men Get Scammed?!

Even though we’ve all heard the phrase, ‘if it’s too good to be true, it probably is’, there are many that will choose to ignore red flags in the hope that this is not the case. This is true even in investment- if fact, I have written many articles on risk tolerance vs reward, and investment scams (I’ll link below). But it seems that investment scams are not a new thing, and even the smartest person could still fall for them! Did you know that even Sir Isaac Newton, the man who discovered gravity, fell for an investment scam!

Read up on how a professional can help you avoid investment scams!
Why fluctuations are normal in the market, and how not one investment can perpetually go up, without any downs.
How you can do your own due diligence in spotting an investment scam!
An example of a bubble many investors bought into…

In the early 1700’s, Sir Isaac Newton lost £20,000 in the South Sea Bubble- this amount would now be worth approximately £4,000,000 today! The ironic thing is that he had actually sold his shares in 1713 at a profit, but then was lured back in and lost it all when it bankrupted Georgian London in 1720.

The South Sea Bubble was a pyramid-scheme backed by the government, at the dawn of fiat currency. The Bank of Scotland had issued the first ever paper bank notes back in 1695, which Newton was a great advocate for. He had previously ran the Royal Mint, and he felt that the Mint could never keep up with the demand for producing coins to keep up with the growing economy.

Naturally, many during this period were suspicious of paper money, because it could be easily forged and had no intrinsic value, and Newton fell privy to many con artists and forged notes, in which he made it one of his missions to seek justice for.

But what was the South Sea Bubble and how did Sir Isaac Newton, one of the world’s most intelligent thinkers, fall for it? At the start of the 18th Century, the British Government’s debt was huge. To ease this burden, the government created the South Sea Company, by requiring investors to exchange their government debt holdings for South Sea stock. Much like ‘pump and dump schemes’ that we know of today, the company’s directors grossly inflated stories and hyped up the company so much that new investors saw impressive returns, such as Newton, whose first investment grew by 100%. It was at this point that he sold his stock, happy with his profit.

However, as the stock continued to rise, Newton became envious of those who were still invested. He became so envious, in fact, that he bought into the stock again, and put a larger amount of his wealth towards it. The South Sea Company achieved very little in terms of growth and in September 1720, the bubble finally burst, rendering many of its investors bankrupt.

What Can We Learn From This?

Although Sir Isaac Newton was more intelligent than most, he still made many common human errors. The first is FOMO (fear of missing out), which isn’t just applicable for not going out to the party; he saw everyone else enjoying the continued profits and felt that he shouldn’t have cashed out early. Herd mentality was another human error- quite often people will want to follow the crowd, and invest in an asset class because ‘everyone is talking about it’ or ‘everyone else is doing it’ (NFTs & Crypto ring a bell anyone?). He quite obviously ignored the red flags and practised ‘selective hearing’- remember this man co-created calculus; he should have known that the numbers weren’t adding up and this was a bubble soon to burst, but he ignored the warning signs.

The most fatal flaw arguably, was greed. People become excited at the thought of making money quickly, and unfortunately this is a driving factor in people making poor investment decisions. He did not take the emotion out of investing, and succumbed to greed. If you can put your emotions aside, you can actually become a better investor than Sir Isaac Newton.

Why emotions can hinder investment planning.
How can you not make the same mistakes as Newton!