Finance Act 1910 The
Finance (1909-10) Act 1910 (
10 Edw. 7. & 1 Geo. 5. c. 8) resulted in a significant net increase in taxation, and it also requisitioned a survey dubbed by
right-wing journalists the "
Lloyd George's
Domesday land-survey", in particular entailing the 1910–1915
valuation maps. Each property and related right under and over land (hereditament) in England and Wales was surveyed and valued, so
Increment Value Duty based on
land value could be levied when any property was sold. The initial rate was 20% of the increase in land-value between the date of the survey and the date of sale (capital gain). Exemptions included farmland and plots smaller than . This tax was substantively altered by the repeal of s. 67 by the Finance Act 1920 which superseded it. As part of the survey, landowners had to fill in a form, and the resulting records are extremely useful for
local history. The records today consist of: • working maps • valuation maps • valuation books • field books. The valuation maps and books are kept in local record offices, and the other items are in the
National Archives at
Kew, London (field books in series IR58; working maps in series IR121 to IR135 according to region and each region has up to 22 different districts).
Finance Act 1920 The
Finance Act 1920 (
10 & 11 Geo. 5. c. 18) included a new "Duty on licences for mechanically propelled vehicles" (
Vehicle Excise Duty, which went into the
Road Fund until 1936), repealed "customs duties on motor spirit and motor spirit dealers licence duties", and introduced "Provisions as to spirits used for generating mechanical power", along with other provisions related to income tax and tax on alcohol.
Finance Act 1946 The
Finance Act 1946 (
9 & 10 Geo. 6. c. 64) established the
National Land Fund and much of
National Savings and Investments.
Finance Act 1948 The
Finance Act 1948 (
11 & 12 Geo. 6. c. 49) established the "Special Contribution", which was a one-off
wealth tax.
Finance Act 1963 The
Finance Act 1963 (c. 25) abolished Schedule A of
income tax, which was a tax on the
imputed rent of
owner-occupiers. It also abolished the
land tax.
Finance Act 1965 The
Finance Act 1965 (c. 25) introduced
corporation tax and
capital gains tax.
Finance Act 1972 The
Finance Act 1972 (c. 41) introduced
value added tax.
Finance Act 1977 The
Finance Act 1977 (c. 36) abolished the last remaining
tithes payable to the
Church of England or
Church in Wales.
Finance Act 2000 The
Finance Act 2000 (c. 17) increased the
Climate Change Levy.
Finance Act 2010 Shortly before the
2010 United Kingdom general election, the
Finance Act 2010 (c. 13) passed as set out by the
Labour Party adjusted the rates of the main taxes, in particular introducing on income tax the 50% 'additional rate' band. The act also reversed a prospective rise enacted in the
Finance Act 2007 (c. 11) of the
inheritance tax nil rate band threshold from £325,000 to £350,000 which would have applied from 6 April 2010, thus, emphasising a degree of
redistribution, the tax instead continues to apply to death estates that do not benefit from any exemptions (such as spouse nil-rate-bands) and consist of a property valued at 25% above the national average.
Finance (No. 2) Act 2010 The
Finance (No. 2) Act 2010 (c. 31) under the
Coalition Government reduced the headline rate of
Capital Gains Tax to 18%. The act increased the general rate of VAT from 17.5% to 20% (while cutting it for imported goods and materials from 28.58% to 25%).
Finance (No. 3) Act 2010 Enacted on 16 December 2010, the
Finance (No. 3) Act 2010 (c. 33) extended foster care relief, extended the applicability of venture capital schemes to companies with a "permanent establishment" in the UK "in financial health", modified the meaning of "distribution" in the Corporation Tax Acts, addressed the income tax treatment of seafarer's income, adjusted treatment of REITs:, modified rules as to EEA/UK consortium claims for group relief, introduced first-year allowances for zero-emission goods vehicles, adjusted for VAT purposes treatment of non-business use of business assets, amended penalties for failure to make payments on time and returns on time, proceduralised recovery of overpaid stamp duty and petroleum revenue tax, modified compliance checks as to excise duties, and clarified the tax treatment of asbestos compensation settlements in relation to the three main taxes.
Finance (No. 2) Act 2017 The
Finance (No. 2) Act 2017 (c. 14) was enacted on 16 November 2017. The act implements tax measures laid out in the
November 2017 United Kingdom budget.
Finance Act 2020 The
Finance Act 2020 (c. 14) was enacted on 22 July 2020. Part 2 provides for the introduction of a Digital Services Tax. ==Full title of the act including preamble and enacting formula==