How changing the VAT threshold affects UK revenues
PolicyEngine's new firm microsimulation model estimates revenue and business impacts of VAT thresholds from £70,000 to £120,000.

Contents
Methodology
Comparison with HMRC projections
Revenue impacts
Impact on VAT-paying firms
Conclusion
The UK requires businesses to register for VAT and charge customers 20% on their sales once annual turnover reaches £90,000, up from £85,000 in 2024-25. The Telegraph reported that Chancellor Rachel Reeves is considering further increases to the VAT threshold.
We analyse how VAT threshold changes between £70,000 and £120,000 would affect revenues and the number of VAT-paying firms for the 2026-27 fiscal year. We constructed synthetic firm microdata to generate these projections and compare them with HMRC's official estimates.
Methodology#
We calibrated synthetic firm microdata to official UK business statistics from two sources: ONS UK Business statistics for overall firm distributions and HMRC VAT statistics for VAT-registered businesses.
Figure 1 shows the distribution of UK firms by turnover band in 2024 according to ONS business statistics.
ONS data shows 32.1% of UK firms have turnover between £100,000 and £249,000, with 14.3% below £50,000 and 19.7% in the £50,000-£99,000 range. Most UK businesses operate with turnover below £250,000.
Figure 2 presents the distribution of VAT-registered firms by turnover band in 2024-25 from HMRC statistics.
HMRC data shows 31.1% of VAT-registered firms have turnover between £1 and £90,000, just below the registration threshold, with 14.0% in the £90,000-£150,000 band.
We constructed synthetic firm microdata through multi-objective optimisation that matches both ONS firm structures and HMRC targets. The data captures firms by industry classification, turnover bands, employee counts, and VAT tax liability.
Figure 3 shows the resulting distribution of UK firms by annual turnover in 2024.
The distribution shows drops in firm density above both the £90,000 VAT threshold and the £150,000 VAT Flat Rate Scheme limit, which offers simplified VAT accounting for smaller businesses.
We construct the initial synthetic firm set for 2024-25, then age turnover and VAT liability values to 2026-27 using growth factors from the OBR's Retail Price Index forecasts, maintaining the same number of firms. Projections assume no behavioral responses to threshold changes.
Comparison with HMRC projections#
HMRC published revenue projections for raising the VAT threshold from £85,000 to £90,000 across the 2024-29 period. My colleague Max Ghenis confirmed that HMRC assumed baseline thresholds of £85,000 in 2024-25, £87,000 in 2025-26, £89,000 in 2026-27, and £92,000 in 2028-29. Figure 4 compares PolicyEngine's estimates with HMRC's projections.
Both models project revenue losses in the first four years, followed by gains in 2028-29. HMRC estimates a £185 million loss in 2025-26; PolicyEngine projects £184 million. The 2028-29 revenue increase occurs because HMRC's baseline assumes the threshold would grow with inflation to £92,000 by that point, so fixing it at £90,000 captures more firms. PolicyEngine's estimates deviate an average 12.3% from HMRC's projections across all five years.
Revenue impacts#
Figure 7 shows revenue impacts for different thresholds in 2026-27.
In 2026-27, a £70,000 threshold would generate approximately £642 million additional revenue while a £120,000 threshold would reduce revenue by approximately £1.1 billion.
Impact on VAT-paying firms#
Figure 5 shows how different threshold levels change the number of VAT-paying firms in 2026-27.
A £70,000 threshold would add approximately 109,000 firms to VAT registration in 2026-27, while a £120,000 threshold would remove approximately 116,000 firms.
Conclusion#
Our synthetic firm microsimulation model shows that VAT threshold changes affect government revenues and the number of VAT-registered businesses. Raising the threshold to £100,000 would remove approximately 48,000 firms from VAT registration in 2026-27, reducing revenue by approximately £371 million.
This analysis represents PolicyEngine's first application of firm-level microsimulation to UK tax policy. In the coming weeks, we'll apply this VAT model to evaluate other policy alternatives, including sector-specific thresholds, phase-ins, and mechanisms to address cliff effects.

Research Associate at PolicyEngine