
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves announced increases to the Minimum Wage rates on the eve of the Budget. The Chancellor confirmed that the government has accepted in full the proposals of the Low Pay Commission (LPC) for increasing minimum wage rates from 1 April 2026.
The National Living Wage (NLW) rate will increase from £12.21 to £12.71 on 1 April 2026 and represents an increase of 50p or 4.1%. The NLW is the minimum hourly rate that must be paid to those aged 21 or over. The increase represents a pay rise of £900 a year for someone working full-time and earning the NLW.
It was also announced that the National Minimum Wage (NMW) - for 18-20 year olds - will increase from £10.00 to £10.85 an hour. This is an 8.5% increase and will see younger workers having their pay boosted by up to £1,500 next year. This increase is part of moves to narrow the gap in wage rates for 18-20 years olds and the NLW and ultimately create a single adult wage rate for all those aged 18 and up.
The NMW rates for 16 to 17 years old will increase from £7.55 to £8.00 – an increase of 45p or 6% per hour – from next April. The Apprentice Rate will mirror this increase in line with earlier recommendations by the LPC.
At the Budget, the government also announced two new measures aimed at supporting young people’s employment and skills development.
27/11/2025 - More...
The chancellor Rachel Reeves announced as part of the Autumn Budget measures that the Income Tax thresholds will be
27/11/2025 - More...
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves announced increases to the Minimum Wage rates on the eve of the Budget.
27/11/2025 - More...
The Chancellor has kept the main pension allowances unchanged but has confirmed a new cap on salary sacrifice
With our newsletter, you automatically receive our latest news per e-mail and get access to the archive including advanced search options!
» Sign up for the Newsletter
» Login