Your £12,570 Allowance Is Not Being Cut — But the Rules Around It Are Changing
From April 2027, HMRC will fix the order in which your Personal Allowance is applied. Landlords, savers and investors face a real-terms increase as a result.
Before vs After April 2027: The New Allocation Order
Switch between current and new rules to see exactly how HMRC applies your Personal Allowance.
New Rates on Asset Income: What Is Rising and When
All rates confirmed in the Finance (No.2) Bill 2025–26 technical note.
| Income Type & Band | Previous Rate | New Rate | From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Property & Savings — Basic Rate Up to £50,270 |
20% | 22% | April 2027 |
| Property & Savings — Higher Rate £50,271–£125,140 |
40% | 42% | April 2027 |
| Property & Savings — Additional Rate Above £125,140 |
45% | 47% | April 2027 |
| Dividends — Basic Rate | 8.75% | 10.75% | April 2026 ✓ Active |
| Dividends — Higher Rate | 33.75% | 35.75% | April 2026 ✓ Active |
| Dividends — Additional Rate | 39.35% | 39.35% — unchanged | — |
How Much More Could You Pay from April 2027?
Enter your income sources below for a side-by-side illustration using the confirmed 2027 rules. This is a simplified estimate — speak to a tax adviser for your personal position.
*Simplified estimate. Does not include NI, pension contributions or all allowances. Based on confirmed HMRC income tax rates.
Who Is in the Frame? HMRC Estimates by Group
Source: HMRC Technical Note — Finance (No.2) Bill 2025–26. These populations overlap and are not additive.
A Timeline of What Is Happening and When
Government Revenue from This Measure (HMRC Forecast)
From the HMRC policy paper accompanying the Autumn Budget 2024.
