Business Asset Disposal Relief – tax increase from April 2026

The tax rate for Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) will increase to 18% (from 14%) on 6 April 2026. BADR offers a reduced Capital Gains Tax (CGT) rate on qualifying disposals such as the sale of a business, shares in a trading company or an individual’s stake in a trading partnership.

These rate increases are accompanied by new anti-forestalling rules designed to prevent individuals from securing the lower BADR rate by using early contracts. Where an unconditional contract is entered into during the 2025-26 tax year but completes on or after 6 April 2026, the disposal will normally be treated as occurring at completion, meaning the higher 18% rate applies. 

However, the legislation allows for “excluded contracts” where the contract was not entered into to secure a tax advantage and, where parties are connected, was entered into wholly for commercial reasons. Where total gains under excluded contracts do not exceed £100,000, the anti-forestalling does not apply.

The lifetime BADR limit remains £1 million meaning individuals can use the relief multiple times, provided their total gains from qualifying disposals do not exceed this threshold. However, the higher CGT rates obviously reduce the tax advantage available. Investors’ Relief CGT rates are currently in line with those for BADR and will also increase to 18% in April 2026.

How bonuses are taxed

Bonuses are treated as taxable earnings, so both employers and employees need to understand how they are taxed and reported. For cash bonuses (including vouchers that can be exchanged for cash), the rules are straightforward. The payment is added to an employee’s normal salary and taxed through the

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Reclaiming VAT on taxi and ride-hailing fares

Changes announced in the Autumn Budget have removed the use of a niche VAT scheme known as the Tour Operators Margin Scheme (TOMS) for private hire vehicle operators from January 2026. TOMS was originally designed for tour operators selling travel packages. However, some large ride-hailing firms

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