The government will not introduce a single rate for landfill tax “at this time”, the chancellor Rachel Reeves announced today (November 26).
During her Autumn Budget statement, the chancellor said that, noting the concern of housebuilders, the government would not “converge to the single rate” following a consultation which proposed removing the lower rate for landfill tax to leave a single rate in 2030, meeting the standard rate.
Currently the standard rate is priced at £126.15 per tonne. The lower rate, broadly applying to inert, less polluting materials, is priced at £4.05 per tonne.
The Home Builders Federation has previously stated that introducing the single rate would mean a 3,000% increase in the tax, threatening the viability of projects.
But Reeves said the government would “prevent the gap between the two rates of landfill tax getting any wider” over the coming years.
In its Budget document, the Treasury said the government had “listened to stakeholders’ arguments made in response to the consultation, and revised its approach to ensure the reforms to landfill tax are proportionate, do not impose unavoidable costs on businesses and do not undermine the government’s target of building 1.5 million new homes in …
Continue reading
To continue reading this article please login or register.
Private registrations rise 12% in 2025 – NHBC
Aylesworth Fleming founder retires again
HBF/HfS publish guidance on competition law compliance
HCA ceo to speak at Housing Market Intelligence
Marley Eternit affordable fibre cement slates
McStone announces promotions to support growth
Barratt appoints chief financial officer
Mix and match doors with Premdor
Alok Sharma is new housing and planning minister
St Modwen sees resilient housebuilding market
HCA ceo to speak at Housing Market Intelligence
Tommafold passes PAS 24 test
The Interview, Antony Stark
Britain's Biggest Housebuilders
Mix and match doors with Premdor
Bellway positive in face of uncertainty
Housebuilders react to election result
Housebuilders react to election result
Britain's Biggest Housebuilders
Bellway positive in face of uncertainty
Alok Sharma is new housing and planning minister
St Modwen sees resilient housebuilding market
Surge in English new home starts
Javid keeps job in May's reshuffle
Surge in English new home starts
Housebuilders react to election result
Britain's Biggest Housebuilders
May pledges 1.5 million homes by 2022
St Modwen sees resilient housebuilding market
Javid keeps job in May's reshuffle
Top 25 : Britain's biggest Housebuilders
News Alerts
Don't miss out on another important news story get important news alerts right to your inbox.
