HMRC tax receipts and National Insurance contributions for the UK (monthly bulletin)
Updated 20 December 2024
Released 20 December 2024. Next release 22 January 2025.
Headlines
Gross HMRC Tax and NICs receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £537.2 billion, which is £15.0 billion higher than the same period last year.
Cash receipts data for April 2023 to March 2024 are in line with the HMRC annual reports and accounts (ARA). Differences between the two publications exist as the HMRC ARA presents data on an accrued basis. Cash receipts from April 2024 remain provisional until aligned to the ARA to be published in Summer 2025.
The data source for this release is available in the HMRC tax receipts and NICs statistics table. Monthly receipts data is available from April 2008.
Figure 1, HMRC receipts for April 2024 to November 2024
Figure 1 above shows total HMRC receipts for April 2024 to November 2024, compared with the same period last year in both percentage and monetary terms and shows:
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cash receipts were higher from Income Tax, Capital Gains Tax and National Insurance contributions (NICs) (£6.8 billion), business taxes (£2.9 billion), VAT (£2.5 billion) and stamp taxes (£1.9 billion)
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cash receipts were lower from alcohol duties (£0.2 billion)
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in percentage terms, receipts were higher for stamp taxes (18%) and Inheritance Tax (11%) and lower for alcohol duties (3%)
About this release
This bulletin includes monthly receipts (on a cash basis) for the current and last three financial years from tax and duties, NICs, and fines and penalties that HMRC are responsible for administering.
Further background on the methodology, release and quality of these statistics can be found in the quality report for HMRC Receipts on GOV.UK.
Income Tax, Capital Gains Tax and NICs
Income Tax, CGT and NICs receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £294.4 billion, which is £6.8 billion higher than the same period last year.
PAYE IT and NICs receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £277.6 billion, which is £6.7 billion higher than the same period last year. The latest receipts in November largely relate to October liabilities. Estimates on earnings and employment are available in HMRC’s published statistics.
Figure 2, Monthly Receipts
Figure 2 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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peaks in July and January each year reflect the bi-annual due dates for SA
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peaks in January to April typically capture PAYE bonus-related receipts, particularly from the financial sector
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the NICs rates increase, effective from April to October 2022, affects HMRC’s NICs receipts from May to November 2022 inclusive
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the NICs Primary Threshold increase, effective from July 2022, affects HMRC’s NICs receipts from August 2022 onwards
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the reduction of the main rate of Employee National Insurance from 12% to 10%, effective from January 2024, affects receipts from February 2024 onwards
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the reduction of the main rate of Employee National Insurance from 10% to 8%, effective from April 2024, affects receipts from May 2024 onwards
Further information on Income Tax and personal incomes is available in the personal taxes section published on GOV.UK.
Value Added Tax (VAT)
Total VAT receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £118.1 billion, which is £2.5 billion higher than the same period last year.
Please note that annual VAT receipts for 2022 to 2023 and 2023 to 2024 have not been aligned to HMRC’s Cash Based Trust Statement while ongoing assurance is performed. We will provide an update once investigations are complete.
Figure 3, Monthly receipts
Figure 3 above shows the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 shows:
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large peaks in April, July, October, and January reflect when the majority of receipts are paid quarterly and largely corresponding with the end of the financial and calendar years
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receipts in 2022 to 2023 may have been influenced by both high levels of inflation and subsequent changes in real consumer expenditure, though it is not possible to directly disaggregate these effects
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receipts for April 2023 to March 2024 are £9.1 billion higher when compared to the same period in the year earlier and this could be due to consumption remaining at the same level in real terms while prices have increased
Further information and statistics on VAT are available in the Excise duties, VAT and other indirect tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Business Taxes
This section includes receipts from Corporation Tax, Petroleum Revenue Tax, Bank Levy (from July 2011), Bank Surcharge (from April 2016), Diverted Profits Tax (from March 2017), Digital Services Tax (from March 2022), Residential Property Developer Tax (from June 2022), Energy Profits Levy (from December 2022), Electricity Generator Levy (from September 2023) and Economic Crime Levy (from September 2023).
Business Taxes receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £54.9 billion, which is £2.9 billion higher than the same period last year.
Figure 4, Monthly receipts
Figure 4 above shows the monthly receipts pattern in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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peaks in June, September, December and March are when the majority of the largest companies make their corporation tax quarterly instalment payments
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the much higher receipts in January 2023 compared with a year earlier is mainly due to higher offshore receipts, because of high energy prices following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and the new Energy Profits Levy
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the noticeably higher receipts in June 2023, September 2023, December 2023 and March 2024 compared with previous years can be attributed to the increase in the main rate of corporation tax from 19% to 25% in April 2023, alongside growth in company profits
Further information and statistics on these taxes are available in the corporate tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Stamp Taxes and Annual Tax Enveloped Dwellings (ATED)
Stamp Taxes receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £12.1 billion, which is £1.9 billion higher than the same period last year.
Figures exclude land transaction taxes devolved to Scotland and Wales.
Figure 5, Monthly receipts:
Figure 5 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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the spikes in June and July 2021, and then in September and October 2021 can be explained by higher numbers of transactions completed before the end of the SDLT holiday which ended on the 30 June (for zero tax rate on the first £500,000) and 30 September (for zero tax rate on the first £250,000)
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the higher receipts between April and September 2022, compared to the same period a year earlier, can be explained in part by the lower tax rates in 2021 to 2022 due to the SDLT residential holiday which finished at the end of September 2021
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the introduction of lower rates of stamp duty from 23 September 2022 is largely reflected in receipts from October 2022 onwards
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the much higher receipts in October and November 2024 compared to the year before is mainly driven by increased transaction levels and policy changes
Further information and statistics on stamps taxes are available in the property statistics section on GOV.UK.
Hydrocarbon Oil (fuel duty)
Hydrocarbon Oils receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £16.7 billion, which is £77 million lower than the same period last year.
Figure 6, Monthly receipts
Figure 6 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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troughs at the beginning of each calendar year in January are most likely to be a result of bad weather conditions
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the lower receipts observed in July 2023 are due to a timing issue which has been offset in August
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total receipts for April 2023 to March 2024 are £0.3 billion lower when compared to the same period a year earlier, primarily driven by a general move away from diesel towards alternative fueled vehicles, including electric and hybrid electric vehicles
Further information and statistics on road fuel taxes are available in the Excise duties, VAT and other indirect tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Tobacco duty
Tobacco receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £5.7 billion, which is £59 million lower than the same period last year.
Figure 7, Monthly receipts
Figure 7 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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the pattern in monthly receipts can be volatile, though the downward trend is expected given the tax was designed in part to reduce uptake and use of tobacco products across the country
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monthly volatility may be caused by high clearances one month followed by low clearances the next month, and these fluctuations can follow price increases by manufacturers, for example forestalling, whereby a manufacturer will bulk release products for consumption prior to anticipating duty increases at budget, though this can vary each year depending on the timings of the budget
Cigarettes are also subject to anti-forestalling restrictions in advance of a Budget, and further information is available in the HMRC Notice 85C published on GOV.UK.
Further information and statistics on Tobacco Duty are available in the Excise duties, VAT and other indirect tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Alcohol Duty
Alcohol receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £8.5 billion, which is £0.2 billion lower than the same period last year.
Figure 8, Monthly receipts
Figure 8 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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receipts in a particular month largely relate to liabilities (alcohol being released for consumption) in the month prior
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December peaks are due to higher levels of alcohol being released for consumption during November in preparation for the Christmas period
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the high peak in July and August 2023 receipts could be partly due to forestalling, pointing to higher levels of alcohol being released for consumption in anticipation of Alcohol Duty changes from the 1 August 2023 but also the cost of living may have had an impact as it could result in more off-trade drinking (drinking at home) which is cheaper and can increase consumption
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receipts may have been further impacted by the Alcohol Duty Reforms that were implemented in August 2023, causing changes to both producer and trader behaviour
Further information and statistics on Alcohol Duties are available in the Excise duties, VAT and other indirect tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Environmental Taxes
This section includes receipts from Landfill Tax, Aggregates Levy, Climate Change Levy, Carbon Price Floor and Plastic Packaging Tax.
Environmental Taxes receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £2.1 billion, which is £89 million lower than the same period last year.
Figure 9, Monthly receipts
Figure 9 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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peaks in April, July, October, and January, reflect when most traders make their quarterly instalment payments
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higher receipts in May 2021, August 2021, November 2021, and February 2022 can be attributed to timing effects linked to the month prior
Further information and statistics on environmental taxes are available in the Excise duties, VAT and other indirect tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Air Passenger Duty (APD)
Air Passenger Duty receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £2.9 billion, which is £0.2 billion higher than the same period last year.
Figure 10, Monthly receipts
Figure 10 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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receipts tend to rise in the summer months and fall during winter, with a slight upturn in January, reflecting increased travel during December
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receipts from March 2021 onwards are significantly lower due to the continued effects of the COVID-19 pandemic and associated impacts on the aviation sector
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following COVID-19 and the subsequent lifting of travel restrictions, the sector has recovered, and receipts have now surpassed pre-pandemic levels
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receipts from April 2024 to November 2024 are all higher when compared to the same period last year which could be a sign of the industry’s continued growth
Further information and statistics on APD are available in the Excise duties, VAT and other indirect tax statistics section on GOV.UK.
Inheritance Tax (IHT)
Inheritance Tax receipts for April 2024 to November 2024 are £5.7 billion, which is £0.6 billion higher than the same period last year.
Figure 11, Monthly receipts
Figure 11 above contains the monthly receipts patterns in each financial year since 2021 to 2022 and shows:
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higher receipts from March 2022 are expected to be due to a combination of higher volumes of wealth transfers following recent IHT-liable deaths, recent rises in asset values, and the government’s March 2021 and Autumn 2022 decisions to maintain the IHT tax free thresholds at their 2020 to 2021 levels up to and including 2027 to 2028, and more information on these decisions are available in the policy papers accompanying the Budget 2021 Finance Bill and the Autumn Finance Bill 2022
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the higher receipts in June 2022, November 2022, June 2023, and October 2023 can be attributed to a small number of higher-value payments than usual
Further information and statistics on IHT are available in the personal incomes statistics section on GOV.UK.
Contacts
For any further information, queries or to provide feedback on this publication, please contact either K Mason or L Suckling at [email protected].
For media enquiries, see HMRC press office.