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Chancellor to unveil series of measures in highly anticipated Budget on Wednesday
Athena StavrouMonday 24 November 2025 09:07 GMTComments
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Rachel Reeves is set to hit thousands of Britain’s most expensive properties with a new levy as she prepares to lay out her highly anticipated Budget this week.
The chancellor is said to be targeting the wealthy with new taxes as she hopes to balance the books with a series of measures to be announced on Wednesday.
A new levy could be applied to some of the most valuable homes, known as a “mansion tax”. The move would reportedly revalue some of the most valuable properties across council tax bands F, G and H and hit 100,000 of them with a new surcharge.
The mansion tax was being suggested as a 1 per cent levy on properties worth £2m or more, but there is an expectation that it may be set much lower at a maximum of £5,000 because of concerns about the London housing market.
It is one of a series of wealth taxes Reeves is set to unveil to fill the spending black hole in her budget with other measures expected to include a profits tax on gambling companies demanded by former PM Gordon Brown, and a levy on bank profits.
Key Points
- Rachel Reeves set to hit thousands of properties with new mansion tax
- When is the Budget?
- Minister apologises for Budget rumours
- Editorial: After all the hype and confusion, Reeves’s Budget must deliver clarity, stability and direction
- Freezing tax thresholds will 'break the letter' on Labour manifeso
Full story: Reeves to hit 100,000 high-value properties with mansion tax in Budget
Rachel Reeves could hit more than 100,000 high-value properties with a mansion tax at this week’s Budget as she seeks to raise money to fill her financial blackhole.
The Independent’s political correspondent Caitlin Doherty has the full story:

Reeves to hit 100,000 high-value properties with mansion tax in Budget
The tax will reportedly apply to homes worth more than £2m and could raise up to £450m for the Treasury Athena Stavrou24 November 2025 09:07Minister insists 'life will get better' off back of Labour growth
Business Secretary Peter Kyle insisted “we can break out of this cycle of high tax and low growth” and “things are getting better in our country”.
He told BBC Breakfast: “We’re trying to make sure that we reassure people that we are going to get a grip on the basics.
“We understand where people are at the moment.
“Things are getting better in our country. We are investing in our public services. We are laying the foundations for economic growth, and that matters to people, because economic growth in our country means that people can do more next year than they could this year – better holidays, they can spend more with their families and on their families, life will get better.
“That’s why growth is so important. We know it means a lot to people, so we are doubling down on those measures.”
He added: “We need to do more of it so we can break out of this cycle of high tax and low growth.”
Business Secretary Peter Kyle (Jeff Moore/PA) (PA Wire)Athena Stavrou24 November 2025 08:58When is the Budget?
Rachel Reeves will deliver her highly anticipated Budget this week.
The chancellor will make her statement in the Commons on Wednesday 26 November.
She will begin after PMQs, which usually finishes at around 12:30pm.
File photo (via REUTERS)Athena Stavrou24 November 2025 08:51Editorial: After all the hype and confusion, Reeves’s Budget must deliver clarity, stability and direction
Britain deserves more than mixed messaging and policy drift.
After weeks of premature proposals, the chancellor must deliver a Budget that provides the confidence and coherence so far lacking in both her stewardship and Labour’s broader economic direction.
Read The Independent’s editorial here:

After all the confusion, Reeves’ Budget must deliver clarity, stability and direction
Editorial: Britain deserves more than mixed messaging and policy drift. After weeks of premature proposals, the chancellor must deliver a Budget that provides the confidence and coherence so far lacking in both her stewardship and Labour’s broader economic directionAthena Stavrou24 November 2025 08:41Freezing tax thresholds will 'break the letter' on Labour manifeso
Helen Miller, director of the influential think tank the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said freezing the income tax threshold would “break the letter” of Labour’s manifesto.
“Assuming that it’s done the same way that it’s been done so far, it will also be a freeze in national insurance thresholds.
“It will therefore also be an increase in national insurance, and if so, in my mind, it would also break the letter of the manifesto, which said no increase in national insurance,” she told The Westminster Hour on BBC Radio 4.
On Wednesday, the Chancellor will reveal the Government’s latest set of tax and spending policies (Lucy North/PA) (PA Wire)Athena Stavrou24 November 2025 08:40Minister apologises for Budget rumours
Labour minister apologises for speculation around budgetAthena Stavrou24 November 2025 08:36Rachel Reeves set to hit thousands of properties with new mansion tax
Rachel Reeves is set to hit thousands of Britain’s most expensive properties with a new levy in her Budget.
A new tax could be applied to some of the most valuable homes, known as a “mansion tax”. The move would reportedly revalue some of the most valuable properties across council tax bands F, G and H and hit 100,000 of them with a new surcharge.
The mansion tax was being suggested as a 1 per cent levy on properties worth £2m or more, but there is an expectation that it may be set much lower at a maximum of £5,000 because of concerns about the London housing market.
(Getty/iStock)Athena Stavrou24 November 2025 08:36More about
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