On Wednesday 26 March 2025, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, the Rt. Hon Rachel Reeves, delivered her Spring Statement. As the Chancellor had promised in the autumn, today's tax statement did not contain any tax increases. She did however accompany the Spring Statement with several consultations in different areas of tax, which we briefly discuss below. As a reminder, we have outlined below previously announced key tax changes which will take effect from April 2025, with relevant commentary on the Scottish perspective where applicable.
While this Spring Statement does not contain any substantive tax measures, the Chancellor has announced the following consultations and policy papers on key tax matters to inform government decisions on future tax legislation. These consultations apply equally in Scotland.
This consultation seeks views on a dedicated service, tailored to the largest and most innovative investment projects, and which provides statutory certainty over how tax rules will be applied to these projects. This should enable the projects involved to more precisely estimate the impact of tax on their rate of return and so invest more confidently. This consultation will run for 12 weeks and will close on 17 June 2025.
This consultation seeks views on a system of advance clearances for the Research and Development (R&D) tax reliefs, with the aims of reducing error and fraud and increasing certainty for businesses. The consultation will run from 26 March 2025 to 26 May 2025, after which time the government will announce its preferred approach later in the year.
This consultation explores the opportunities for improving the quality of data acquired from third parties for tax administration. The new and improved data will be used to help taxpayers get their tax right the first time, while closing the tax gap. The consultation will run from 26 March 2025 to 21 May 2025.
This consultation seeks views on options to reform the framework for financial penalties that apply when inaccuracies are found in returns and documents submitted to HMRC, and where taxpayers do not meet their obligations to notify HMRC of circumstances that affect their tax liability. The consultation will run for 12 weeks from 26 March to 18 June 2025.
Today's announcements also mark a further commitment from the Chancellor to address tax evasion. To that end the Chancellor has announced:
PISCES is a new type of secondary trading platform that will allow for the intermittent trading of private company shares. Following responses from a consultation which was published in March 2024, the government intends to lay a statutory instrument before Parliament in May 2025, which will provide the legal framework for PISCES. The PISCES framework is intended to interact with two tax-advantaged share schemes: Enterprise Management Incentives and Company Share Option Plans, as well as employment-related securities in general, and sets out the income tax, national insurance contributions, and capital gains tax (CGT) implications for employees trading their shares on PISCES.
PISCES transactions will be exempt from Stamp Duty and Stamp Duty Reserve Tax and a consultation on the draft statutory instrument introducing these exemptions will run from 26 March 2025 to 23 April 2025.
Previously rolled out in 2022 in respect of VAT, MTD will now be rolled out in respect of Income Tax. The MTD framework for Income Tax applies from April 2026 for sole traders and landlords with qualifying income over £50,000 and extends to those with incomes over £30,000 from April 2027, and those with income over £20,000 from April 2028. HMRC will continue to engage stakeholders on these changes before legislation is introduced before April 2026.
As a reminder, a number of key tax changes are set to take effect from April 2025, as previously reported in our Autumn Budget communique:
All of these changes will apply equally in Scotland.
The remittance basis of taxation, which is based on domicile status, will be replaced with a new tax regime based on residence from 6 April 2025. Again, these changes will apply equally in Scotland.
The key changes include: