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9 May 2023

Independent retailers are racing to keep up with rivals and retain customers as the battle for loyalty intensifies among supermarkets.

9 May 2023

The European retail sector has enjoyed its best month for international spending on Tax Free goods since the end of the pandemic after sales surged by 40% month on month in March 2023, taking...

4 May 2023

A study into the positive health effects of riding an electric bike has picked up traction in Germany’s press in the past week, according to a piece in Cycling Electric. Researchers at the...

4 May 2023

Two Derby businessmen have come together to encourage locals to hop on their bikes. Dean Jackson and Paul Martin have launched the city's first road racing team to help inspire...

4 May 2023

More people than ever are regularly walking or cycling rather than using the car due to increases in the cost of living.

4 May 2023

Sustrans, the charity that aims to make it easier for everyone to walk, wheel and cycle whether to get to work, to go shopping, to get about their neighbourhood or to just have fun, is calling...

27 Apr 2023

New research has found that consumers feel protective of independent shops and want to support them for their ‘social good’.

26 Apr 2023

Europe's cost of living crisis has benefited discount retailers, but mid-market names are being squeezed as shoppers watch their spending, executives and analysts at an industry conference said...

25 Apr 2023

Birds Eye has launched a new competition to give ten independent retailers the chance to win a variety of prizes that will help them with rising energy bills.

25 Apr 2023

Bromley in Kent is just one area in the UK where retailers and their customers are coming together to celebrate the Coronation on May 6th.

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Indie retailers should start to feel the benefit of business rates drop

Posted on in Business News

Shops, pubs and other high street businesses should be tax cuts of more than 50% after new property valuations came into effect earlier this month.

rates drop

Last year, the Government announced the first revaluation process for business rates – the equivalent of council tax for UK commercial properties – in six years.

Thousands of businesses are due to pay less following drops in the value of commercial real estate, as well as increased sector support, which came into effect on April 1.

According to the commercial real estate advisory firm Altus Group, the average retail shop will see its rates bill fall by £4,494 to £3,678 for the new year, representing a 55% tax cut.

On average, pubs will see a £5,534 decline, restaurants £5,553 and accommodation businesses £4,021.
The new property valuations will be based on figures calculated from April 2021, with the taxes having most recently been based on values from 2015.

The retail sector has seen rateable values fall by 10%, pubs by 17%, restaurants by 5% and hotels, serviced apartments, and guest and boarding houses by 28% overall, according to Altus’s annual review.

As part of a £13.6 billion support package announced last autumn, the Government has also frozen the tax rates from April 1, protecting firms from rising inflation.

It also increased the retail, hospitality and leisure discount from 50% to 75% for 2023/24 up to a cash cap of £110,000 per business.

Quoted in the London Evening Standard, Alex Probyn, global president of property tax at Altus Group, said: “These tax changes will bring much-needed respite from the current high cost of doing business for high street firms.”

However, he also warned that “the freeze in tax rates and the bigger retail discount are just a one-year commitment”.

Revaluations are also coming into effect in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, where business rates are devolved.

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