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Budget 2014: what it means for you and your money

George Osborne has delivered the 2014 Budget. Here's what he had to say, and what it means for your money.

George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, has delivered his fifth Budget to the House of Commons. This time around, there were several surprises, including some major changes to savings and private pensions.

Here’s what he had to say and what it means for your money.

Personal tax allowance

As predicted, the personal allowance, the amount you earn before you start paying Income Tax, will rise to £10,500 from next year. The threshold for paying the 40% higher rate of Income Tax will rise to £41,865 next month, then by a further 1% next year. However, the latter was just confirmation of an earlier pledge made in the 2012 Autumn Statement, not a new announcement.

Savings

Helping savers is the “centrepiece” of the Government’s plans.

ISAs will become simpler, with the merging of Cash and Stocks & Shares ISAs into a single New ISA. The annual limit on how much you can save in an ISA will rise to £15,000 from 1st July and allow money to be moved from shares into cash (something that is currently prohibited).

The Junior ISA limit will also increase to £4,000 a year.

The amount you can put into Premium Bonds will also increase from £30,000 to £40,000 from June 2014. It will then jump to £50,000 in 2015/16. And the number of £1 million winners will be doubled from one a month to two.

Low income savers will no longer face a 10% tax rate on savings income. And the amount of savings income that will enjoy this new 0% rate will jump from £2,880 to £5,000 from April 2015.

Pensions

The Government will legislate to remove all limits on how pensioners can access their pension savings, meaning no one will be forced to buy an annuity.

It will also introduce a new guarantee that everyone who retires on a defined contribution scheme, such as the new workplace pension scheme,  will be offered free, impartial face-to-face advice. A sum of £20 million is being spent on developing this new right to advice, which will launch next April.

If you decide to take all of your pension savings at once it will be taxed as normal income, instead of at the current 55% rate.

People will now be allowed to withdraw their private pension pots, what's known as flexible drawdown, so long as they have an annual income of at least £12,000 from other sources. This has been reduced from £20,000. The amount of your pension that you can take as a lump sum is also increasing from £18,000 to £30,000.

The maximum size of a small pension pot which can be taken as a lump sum is also jumping significantly, from £2,000 to £10,000. Up to three pension pots of up to £10,000 can be taken, instead of two.

And the amount you can withdraw via what's known as capped drawdown will increase from 120% to 150% of the equivalent value of an annuity.

These last five changes changes will be coming into effect from 27th March.

New pensioner bonds will be issued by National Savings & Investments. Open to everyone aged 65 or over from next January, the rates will be set in the autumn. The current assumption is that they will pay an interest rate of 2.8% on a one-year bond and 4% on a three-year bond. An annual investment limit of £10,000 per bond will apply.

Income from them will be taxed at your normal rate as per other savings income.

Air passenger duty

Reform is on the way. From next year all long-haul flights will carry the same lower band as flights to the United States of America. Good news if you’re heading off somewhere exotic.

Housing

There will be further reforms to planning rules to ensure more homes are built.

There will be £150 million to help people build their own homes. The current support for mortgage interest scheme will be extended to 2016.

As we already knew, the Help to Buy: equity loan scheme will be extended until 2020.

The Government claims 200,000 new homes will be built as a result of these measures.

Roads

Following the dreadful weather this winter, £200 million will be set aside to help fix the nation’s potholes.

Read Claim compensation for pothole damage to your car, bike or motorcycle.

Energy

There will be £7 billion to cut energy bills for businesses and families. Families will save £15 on their energy bills a year thanks to capping of the Carbon Price Support rate, on top of the £50 of savings from changes to green levies at the start of the year.

Welfare cap

There will be a permanent cap on welfare spending. This will be set at £119 billion in 2015/6, and then rise in line with inflation.

However, the State Pension and some unemployment benefits won’t be included in this.

Fuel duty

The fuel duty rise planned for September will not take place.

Bingo duty

This has been halved to 10%.

Tobacco duty

Price escalator was due to end next year but will be extended for the rest of the next parliament. As a result, tobacco prices will continue to rise by 2% above inflation.

Alcohol duty

The duty escalator has been scrapped for all alcohol duties. Instead it will rise with inflation, with certain exceptions (Scottish whisky, ordinary cider). Beer duty has been cut by 1p.

Small business support

The annual investment allowance (AIA) for businesses, which receives 100% tax relief, will be doubled to £500,000 from April until the end of 2015.

New £1 coin

To counter the fact that one in 30 £1 coins are now fakes, a new, secure £1 coin will be introduced. For full details, read New £1 coin unveiled.

Childcare support

The Chancellor talked about the new childcare support the Government is going to offer from 2015, which was officially announced yesterday. For more details, check out Families to get up to £2,000 a year to help with childcare costs.

Keep on top of your budget with our free MoneyTrack tool

More from lovemoney.com:

Budget 2014: the speech in full

New £1 coin unveiled

Families to get up to £2,000 a year to help with childcare costs

Inflation basket: how Netflix and flavoured milk affect our money

Picture courtesy of HM Treasury Flickr page

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  • 20 March 2014

    Question : Re Low income savers will no longer face a 10% tax rate on savings income. And the amount of savings income that will enjoy this new 0% rate will jump from £2,880 to £5,000 from April 2015. Does this mean that the new Pensioner bonds could be tax free (£400 @ 3 year term and £280 @ 1 year) ? Also, for small value savers doesn't this make Cash ISAs redundant ? Does peer to peer income come under "savings income" for tax purposes ? The old NS&I bonds were brilliant .. tax free and guaranteed interest rate. Sadly now coming to a close. I had hoped that these new Pensioner Bonds would have been similar.... only the same money "churned" back to the same provider after all ! £5000 savings income is high in the circles in which I move. £125000 @ 4% (if you can find it) Am I reading these figures correctly ? Any clarification would be most welcome

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  • 20 March 2014

    Good morning! A request to the tax-wise please, if you can spare a moment. I'm a bit confused about what I can or can't do with my AVCs. I'm 64 and have an occupational pension of around £13,000 per year with some AVCs waiting in the wings. I delayed signing up to a rip-off annuity in the hope that I might be able to withdraw all the AVCs at some point and invest this cash more wisely. My AVC pot stands at just over £12,000. Under the new regulations can I now draw it all down or does it fall under the 'small pension pot' title meaning I can't cash it in because it's more than the £10,000 threshold? Mmmm! Thankyou for your help.

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  • 19 March 2014

    This budget seems reasonable but it is pre-election budget so is bound to be a bit of a give-away budget. It looks good that everyone will get help with their fuel bills but from what has been stated before, after the election pensioners who have worked hard all their lives and have saved all their lives (something the Chancellor says he wants to encourage) will then lose the £200 help with their fuel bills (which has already been cut by £50 from £250) if their savings are over a certain limit whilst those who have not worked and never contributed to the tax system will get to keep this help money (I am not criticising those who genuinely cannot work through no fault of their own). It is often said by politicians that if pensioners have the savings then why shouldn't they contribute but they already have during their working lives in tax and national insurance contributions over a large number of years. If successive governments of various parties have squandered this money it is not the pensioners fault. The same will also apply when contributions have to be made for care homes. The workers and savers will probably still have to use all their lifetimes savings and sell their homes to pay for this whilst those with no savings will have to contribute nothing. Nobody minds helping out their fellow man to a certain degree but it is always the workers and savers who get dumped on when they get towards the end of their lives. Do nothing in this country and your quids in.

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