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Online Budget calculator: What does it mean for you?

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Rishi Sunak’s Budget speech paid a lot of attention to support for the economy during the pandemic, to changes to company tax and the national debt, but for most of us there is one immediate question: how will it affect my finances?

Whether you are looking to buy a house – and so will benefit from the three-month extension of the stamp duty holiday – or rely on minimum wage, which will rise by £350 a year for full-time workers in April to £8.91 per hour, the economic changes today will be felt by many.

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Not forgetting a string of other influential policies the chancellor outlined earlier including the extension of furlough until September, duties on alcohol and fuel being frozen, a six-month extension on the £20 weekly increase to universal credit payments, VAT cuts for the hospitality and tourism sectors to remain, and £5bn worth of “restart grants” to be made available from April to help businesses reopen after lockdown restrictions ends.

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It was also revealed that, for the first time since 1974, the rate companies pay on their profits will rise from 19 to 25 per cent in 2023 – the higher rate still leaves the UK with the lowest corporation taxes in the G7.

Clearly, there is a lot to consider. But the online calculator below, created by accountants Blick Rothenberg, offers a quick reckoner as to how the latest raft of changes will affect you, broadly speaking.

Input a few details and it will offer an indication as to how much better or worse you will be following the chancellor’s announcements.

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Budget 2021: Key points at a glance