Changes to business rates
The government have announced some changes to business rates from 1 April.
A summary of what your business rates bill means.
Business rates are collected by local authorities. This money, together with revenue from council tax payers, locally generated income and grants from central government, is used to pay for local services.
From 1 April 2013, local authorities keep a proportion of the business rates paid locally. This provides an incentive for us to work with local businesses to create a favourable local environment for growth.
Find more information about the business rates system on GOV.UK
Payment of business rate bills is automatically set to 10 monthly instalments. However, you are able to make payments in 12 monthly instalments if you so wish.
If you wish to do this you should contact the business rates team as soon as possible.
We work out your business rates bill by multiplying the rateable value of the property by a multiplier. For the financial year 2026 to 2027, there are five multipliers:
If your property has a rateable value of less than £50,999 your bill will be calculated using the small business rates multiplier.
If you occupy qualifying retail, hospitality & leisure properties, your bill will be calculated using the relevant retail, hospitality & leisure multiplier, dependent on the rateable value. A high-value multiplier will be used for properties with rateable values of £500k or more. The multipliers are shown on your bill.
Except in the City of London where special arrangements apply, the government sets the multipliers for each financial year for the whole of England.
All multipliers for a financial year are based on the previous year’s multiplier adjusted to reflect the Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation figure for the September prior to the billing year, unless a lower multiplier is set by the government. The current multipliers are shown on the front of your bill.
Apart from properties that are exempt from business rates, each non-domestic property has a rateable value which is set by the Valuation Office Agency (VOA).
The VOA draws up and maintains a full list of all rateable values.
The rateable value of your property is shown on the front of your bill. This broadly represents the yearly rent the property could have been let for on the open market on a particular date. For the current rating list, this date was set as 1 April 2024.
The VOA may change the rateable value if circumstances change. The ratepayer and certain others who have an interest in the property can check and challenge the valuation shown in the list if they believe it is wrong.
Full details on your rights of appeal are available from the VOA. We can only backdate any business rates rebate to the date from which the list is changed.
Further information about the grounds on which challenges can be made and the process for doing so can be found on the VOA website.
All non-domestic property rateable values are reassessed at revaluations. The most recent revaluation took effect from 1 April 2026. Revaluations ensure that business rates bills are up-to-date, more accurately reflect current rental values and relative changes in rents.
Frequent revaluations ensure the system continues to be responsive to changing economic conditions.
There are a range of reliefs available to help reduce the business rates you pay. Some of these are permanent and others are temporary, often introduced by the government at a fiscal event.
You may be able to get relief on your business rates of up to 100%, and will depend on the rateable value of the property.
You can get small business rates relief if you:
You can only get small business rate relief on one property.
The rateable values of the properties are added together, and the relief is applied to the main property.
If you don’t qualify for relief, but your property has a rateable value of less than £51,000, you will still pay less. Your bill will be automatically calculated using the small business rate multiplier or the small retail, hospitality and leisure multiplier (even if you have more than one property).
Businesses that take on an additional property which would normally have meant the loss of small business rate relief will be allowed to keep that relief for three years for properties taken on from 27 November 2025.
If you believe you should be getting small business rate relief but have not received it, please apply for small business rate relief.
If you continue to satisfy the conditions for relief which apply at the relevant time, you will automatically continue to receive relief in each new valuation period.
If you get small business rate relief, you need to tell us about the following changes in circumstances (we will pick up on all other changes):
Charities and registered community amateur sports clubs are entitled to 80% relief where the property is occupied by the charity or the club, and is wholly or mainly used for the charitable purposes of the charity (or of that and other charities), or for the purposes of the club (or of that and other clubs).
We may also give further relief on the remaining bill.
If you believe you should be getting charitable rate relief but have not received it, please apply for charitable rate relief.
You don’t have to pay business rates in the first three months that a property is empty. After this time, most businesses must pay full business rates.
Some properties can get extended empty property relief:
At a revaluation, some ratepayers will see reductions or no change in their bill whereas some ratepayers will see increases.
Transitional relief schemes are introduced at each revaluation to help those facing increases. Transitional relief is automatically applied and is shown on the front of your bill.
Find out more about revaluation and transitional relief
Certain types of properties in a rural settlement with a population below 3,000 may be entitled to 100% relief. The property must be occupied and either:
Ratepayers losing small business or rural rate relief because of the 2026 revaluation will have increases to their bill limited to £800 per year or by a set percentage, whichever is higher.
Ratepayers will receive the relief until the end of the scheme or until their bill reaches what it would have been without the relief scheme, whichever comes first.
We can give relief to ratepayers experiencing hardship in certain circumstances.
Apply for business rates relief
We can also grant discretionary local discounts.
You can find out more about local discounts
The new UK subsidy control regime commenced from 4 January 2023. The new regime enables public authorities, including devolved administrations and local authorities, to deliver subsidies that are tailored for local needs. Public authorities giving subsidies must comply with the UK’s international subsidy control commitments.
The subsidy control legislation provides the framework for a new, UK-wide subsidy control regime. Further information about subsidy control can be found on the GOV.UK website.
Find out more about subsidy allowance
Ratepayers do not have to be represented in discussions about their rateable value or their rates bill. Appeals against rateable values can be made free of charge. However, ratepayers who do wish to be represented should be aware that members of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (RICS) and the Institute of Revenues, Rating and Valuation (IRRV) are qualified and are regulated by rules of professional conduct designed to protect the public from misconduct.
Before you employ a rating adviser, you should check that they have the necessary knowledge and expertise, as well as appropriate indemnity insurance. Take great care, and, if necessary, seek further advice before entering into any contract.
Information relating to this and previous financial years gross expenditure is available on our council tax pages.
Please contact us to request a hard copy if you would like one.