Spring Budget: Child benefit tax rule changes announced

Spring Budget: Child benefit tax rule changes announced

One of the few surprises in the Spring Budget was the change affecting how child benefit is taxed for higher earners.

The high income child benefit charge (HICBC or ‘hicbic’) was introduced in January 2013 to reduce child benefit payments for higher earners. It was considered an arbitrary piece of legislation by some as the charge was triggered where one individual had income exceeding £50,000. A couple with income of £49,999 each were unaffected, but a single parent with income of £60,000 lost all their child benefit.

The £50,000 threshold, like so many trigger points in the tax regime, was not inflation-linked. What started out as a threshold originally £8,550 above the higher rate threshold had fallen to £270 below it by April 2021. As child benefit increased, so did the effective rate of clawback. For example, in 2023/24 someone with income of £56,000 and two children suffered a HICBC of 20.75% in addition to 40% income tax (42% in Scotland) on each extra £1 of income earned. The more children, the higher the HICBC rate.

This year’s March Budget made two significant changes for 2024/25:

  • The threshold was raised to £60,000. Had it been index-linked since 2013 it would have been about £68,500 by April 2024.

  • The income band over which child benefit is gradually reduced was doubled to £20,000, meaning that all benefit is now lost at £80,000 rather than £60,000. The doubling of the band also reduces the effective rate of HICBC – for two children it is now 11.06%.

If your – or your partner’s – income is between £60,000 and £80,000 and you stopped payment of child benefit to avoid the HICBC, you should now consider restarting payments, even though some HICBC will be payable. As child benefit can only be backdated by three months, prompt action is needed. To start the process go to the government website. At the same time, you should seek advice on your options for reducing taxable income (and thus the HICBC). These could include making pension contributions or rearranging investments.

Longer term, the Chancellor has said that HICBC would be made fairer by basing it on household income from April 2026. That change promises to be an administrative challenge, given independent taxation, but of course the Chancellor may also have changed in two years’ time.

Tax treatment varies according to individual circumstances and is subject to change.

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