With the Autumn Budget just weeks away, attention is squarely on which taxes Chancellor Rachel Reeves could end up increasing.

Anticipation has been building for months around the measures that will shape the fiscal event on 26 November, with changes to income tax and potential new property taxes included within the rumours.

Reeves’s first Autumn Budget in 2024 saw increases to employer national insurance (NI) contributions, capital gains tax (CGT) hikes, and changes to inheritance tax (IHT) reliefs .

Many are bracing for similarly impactful announcements this time.

Economists are predicting the Chancellor may need to raise £20bn to £30bn to fill a hole in the public finances.

This hole is partly bigger because the government’s official forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibi

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