Menu
Save, make, understand money

News

Tax tips to get 'Red Box Ready' before the Autumn Budget

Tax tips to get 'Red Box Ready' before the Autumn Budget
Matt Browning
Written By:
Posted:
19/04/2025
Updated:
17/04/2025

With the dust still settling on the Spring Statement and a (hopefully) sunny long bank holiday underway, the next fiscal announcement from Chancellor Rachel Reeves might feel an age away.

However, the next Budget – set for October or November – is just six months down the road, so time is of the essence to protect your finances from any potential tax changes – particularly when the knock-on effect of Trump’s tariffs threatens to reduce the amount of headroom available for spending is left for the Government.

Sarah Coles, head of personal finance at Hargreaves Lansdown, believes it is vital Brits get their household finances in order prior to the next announcement.

Coles said: “The threat of tariffs and the looming spectre of global recession have shelved your relaxing summer plans.

“Forget long lazy days on the beach; this summer is all about putting the legwork in to get Red Box Ready. The fallout from the tariff drama could come together in a difficult Autumn Budget, so we need to fix the roof while the sun shines, and prepare for whatever it may hold.”

The finance expert has provided six tips to protect yourself from whatever is announced in the Autumn Budget.

Sponsored

How life insurance can benefit your health and wellbeing over the decades

Sponsored by Post Office

Six tips to get ‘Red Box Ready’

1. Bring your taxable income down

In terms of earnings, check if your employer operates a salary sacrifice scheme, where you give up a portion of your salary and spend it on certain things free of tax – including pensions. If not, you can still pay into a pension and receive tax relief at your highest marginal rate.

If you’re making income from savings interest, you can use a cash ISA to protect as much as possible from tax. This is particularly beneficial for higher- and additional-rate taxpayers, who get a smaller personal savings allowance (or none at all) and pay a higher rate on the excess.

2. Take advantage of all your ISA allowances

The Government is set to launch a consultation on the future of ISAs, which could lead to changes in the Autumn Budget.

There’s the potential for positive reforms, prioritising improvements to the current regime rather than removing incentives to support investing and saving.

However, it still makes sense to make the most of the system as it stands, ahead of any changes, while you can be certain of the allowances and tax treatment. The new tax year has brought a fresh new set of allowances from cash ISAs to stocks and shares ISAs, the Junior ISA and the Lifetime ISA.

3. Make fewer taxable gains on investments

If it makes sense for you to sell any assets that have made a loss, you can report them and then use them to reduce overall taxable gains either in this year or in future years – by carrying them forward. It’s a good idea to realise gains as you go along too, so you can take advantage of your £3,000 annual allowance for tax-free gains.

When you’re selling up, if you have the ISA allowance available, you can move the assets into a stocks and shares ISA, using the Bed and ISA or share exchange process, which will ensure these investments are protected from capital gains tax in the future too.

4. Cut your costs and build a savings safety net in case things are squeezed

Wages have been rising ahead of prices for a while now, so more people have wiggle room in their budgets. It’s tempting to enjoy the freedom, but this is your chance to put it to better use.

While you’re working age, you should be building an emergency savings safety net big enough to cover 3-6 months’ worth of essential sending in a competitive easy-access account.

Once you’ve retired, you should aim for 1-3 years’ worth. If this needs work, it should be a priority, but don’t overlook the longer term. There’s no need to hoard more cash than you need, when it could be working harder for your future in investments and pensions.

5. Use your pension allowance

The annual allowance allows you to contribute whatever is the lowest of your annual income and £60,000 to your pension and receive tax relief at your marginal rate. This means that a higher-rate taxpayer making a £60,000 pension contribution will find it only costs them £36,000. Added to this, you can also make use of any unused allowances from the previous three tax years through carry forward. This means that, provided you earn enough, you can contribute up to £240,000 to your pension this tax year.

You can also take the opportunity to boost your loved ones’ retirement prospects. You can contribute up to £2,880 to the SIPP of a non-working spouse or child and they will receive a tax relief top-up to £3,600.

6. Consider gifts

You have a variety of allowances available to you. For instance, you have an annual allowance of £3,000 per year. This money will drop out of your estate for inheritance tax purposes immediately. You can give the whole amount to one person, or split it between several. You also have a small gift allowance of £250. You can give as many of these as you want (although not to the person you gave £3,000 to). There are also gifts attached to loved ones getting married or entering a civil partnership. You can give up to £5,000 to a child, £2,500 to a grandchild and £1,000 to anyone else and it leaves your estate immediately.

Gifting out of surplus income may also prove popular. You can give any amount, and it leaves your estate straightaway, as long as you can prove the gifts are regular, come from income and don’t affect your standard of living.

You can also make larger one-off gifts, which will pass out of your estate after seven years. These are known as potentially exempt transfers. If you’re concerned about a potential inheritance tax bill, you might want to make the gift sooner rather than later, and get the clock ticking.