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Reform UK would raise VAT threshold to £150,000

City PM Published Jun 10, 2026 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
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Reform UK will raise the VAT registration threshold for small businesses to £150,000.
150000 GBP · VAT registration threshold
Reform UK, party announcement
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The tax break would cost the government more than £2 billion before being offset by long‑run fiscal benefits.
more than 2000000000 GBP · cost to government
Reform UK, statement
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Party officials say the tax break will help 320,000 firms almost immediately.
320000 · firms helped
Party officials, suggestion
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The EU limits its members to a VAT threshold of €100,000.
100000 EUR · VAT threshold
EU, statement
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Reform UK leader suggested raising the VAT threshold to around £160,000.
about 160000 GBP · VAT threshold
Reform UK leader, statement
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Jeremy Hunt raised the VAT threshold from £85,000 to £90,000 when he was Chancellor.
85000 GBP · VAT threshold before90000 GBP · VAT threshold after
Jeremy Hunt, Chancellor
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Reform UK has announced it would raise the VAT threshold for small businesses from £90,000 to £150,000 despite long-running debates over the cost and benefits of reforming the tax. 

Reform announced on Wednesday it would create a “fair deal for the White Van man” by increasing the VAT registration threshold to £150,000. 

The party said the tax break for small businesses would cost the government more than £2bn before later being paid for by the “long-run fiscal benefits of the productivity boost” across the UK economy. Sources also said the policy would be fully funded in the short term based on current planned spending reductions to the civil service, welfare and net zero policies. 

Party officials suggested that the tax break would help 320,000 firms “almost immediately.”

The EU limits its members to a VAT threshold of €100,000, with Reform UK arguing it would make the UK more competitive and able to reap the benefits of Brexit. 

Nigel Farage said the proposals would help “men like Robert Kenyon”, the plumber who is standing for Reform against Andy Burnham at the Makerfield by-election. 

Farage said: “When we abolished tax on overtime we promised we would also deliver for the self-employed and those running small businesses. This is the first of those offers.

“The policy we have announced today will lift tens of thousands of sole traders out of VAT and end a brutal cliff edge,” he added. 

Farage’s impromptu policy announcement has come amid intense pressure on the party over its candidate selection for the crucial by-election.

The Reform UK leader told City PM last year he thought that the VAT threshold was “far too low” as there were “so many one or two-man bands that find themselves literally on that cusp”. 

He then said the threshold should be raised to around £160,000. 

Jeremy Hunt raised the threshold from £85,000 to £90,000 when he was Chancellor as the Office for Budget Responsibility judged it would have a positive impact on tax receipts.

Economists at the Chartered Institute of Taxation have argued that the threshold should be changed to level the playing field for all business, simplify tax regulation and generate more sustainable revenue. The economists Ben Ramanauskas said that while VAT was a “constraint” on growth, raising the threshold would come at a “considerable expense to the public finances”.

“Rather than raising the threshold, the government should get the pain out of the way earlier by lowering or abolishing the threshold and broadening the VAT base,” he added.

Farage’s announcement came a week before the by-election against Burnham. Kenyon has faced scrutiny over messages he sent on a rugby league forum appearing to defend Russia’s annexation of Crimea and using graphic language about the presenter and activist Carol Vorderman. 

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