Supporting documents for Budget 2025
Supporting documents alongside the main Budget 2025 document: distributional analysis, presentational scorecard, recostings table and policy costings.
Documents
Details
Impact on households: distributional analysis to accompany Budget 2025
This document sets out the estimated impact of changes to tax, welfare and public service spending policy that carry a direct, quantifiable impact on households. It also presents estimates of the overall level of tax paid and public spending received by households.
Policy costings
This document sets out the assumptions and methodologies used in the government’s costing of policy decisions announced since Spring Statement 2025. For each decision it contains a description of the measure, the base, and the methodology for the costing (including relevant adjustments for behavioural responses). It highlights the main areas of additional uncertainty.
Data sources
This document sets out the data sources used in charts, tables and text in the Budget 2025 document. This should be read in parallel to the references contained in the Budget 2025 document.
Table 4.1 Budget 2025 Policy Decisions
Table 4.1 shows the cost or yield of all government decisions accounted for at Budget 2025 which have a direct effect on Public Sector Net Borrowing (PSNB) in the years up to 2030-31. This includes tax measures, changes to aggregate Departmental Expenditure Limits (DEL) and measures affecting annually managed expenditure (AME).
Table 4.2 Measures announced at Spring Statement 2025 or earlier that will take effect from 27 November 2025 or later
Table 4.2 shows the cost or yield of all announced government policy decisions that will take effect from 27 November 2025 or later, with a direct effect on Public Sector Net Borrowing (PSNB), costed using the determinants from the OBR’s November 2025 forecast in the years up to 2030-31. This includes tax measures, and measures affecting annually managed expenditure (AME).
Updates to this page
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The exchequer impact of the measure ‘Gambling Duty: Increase Remote Gaming Duty to 40% from 1 April 2026, introduce a new Remote Betting Rate at 25% (excluding Self-Service Betting Terminals, spread betting, pool betting & UK horseracing) from 1 April 2027, and abolish Bingo Duty from 1 April 2026’ was incorrectly set out in this document. The exchequer impact has been updated to reflect the exchequer impact set out in other Budget documents.
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First published.
Update history
2025-11-27 15:49
The costing note for the measure ‘Supporting Savers: Make the Help to Save scheme permanent, maintain total ISA annual subscription limit at £20,000 with cash limit reduced to £12,000 for under-65s from April 2027, delay ISA digitalisation until April 2028 and maintain the ISA subscription limits until 2030/31’ has been updated to clarify the changes covered by the measure.
2025-11-27 11:54
The exchequer impact of the measure ‘Gambling Duty: Increase Remote Gaming Duty to 40% from 1 April 2026, introduce a new Remote Betting Rate at 25% (excluding Self-Service Betting Terminals, spread betting, pool betting & UK horseracing) from 1 April 2027, and abolish Bingo Duty from 1 April 2026’ was incorrectly set out in this document. The exchequer impact has been updated to reflect the exchequer impact set out in other Budget documents.
2025-11-26 13:44
First published.