A Jenga tower

90 UK taxes. On one chart.

By Dan Neidle

May 28, 2026

13 Comments

The UK has 90 taxes. This chart shows them all, and this article explains why we have so many.

The chart is interactive: click on a segment or category to drill down. The control underneath switches between pounds, % of GDP and % of all tax take.

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Data is for 2024/25, and the full methodology is below.

It’s immediately clear how dependent we are on taxes on employment. The UK is pretty typical here – all OECD countries have a similar dependence on taxes on employment (excepting very small and/or oil/gas rich countries).

Those taxes, together with VAT and corporation tax make up about 3/4 of all tax revenue – which is why Labour’s decision to rule out increasing any of those taxes was so unfortunate, given they clearly intended to put up tax.

Note that there are only 81 taxes visible on the chart; the other nine can’t be seen, because they don’t currently yield any revenue.

The obvious question is: why do we need so many taxes?

Part of the answer is sensible. Different taxes do different jobs. We tax income, consumption, business profits, property, capital gains and environmental harms because we want to tax these different things differently. Some taxes are deliberately behavioural: we tax tobacco, alcohol, gambling, landfill and carbon emissions not just to raise revenue, but because we would like less smoking, drinking, gambling, dumping and emitting.

But that only explains some of the chart. The rest is politics. Governments create small targeted taxes because they sound painless: a levy on banks, a surcharge on banks, a duty on shares, another duty on shares, a levy on this sector, a charge on that activity. Each one had a speech and a press release. None had a repeal date.

So the UK tax system is not really a designed object. It is a very long-running game of Jenga, where each generation of politician carefully adds new taxes and new tweaks to the top of the pile, and rarely does anyone dare to touch the horrors lurking lower down.

Perhaps the oddest of the UK’s many tax oddities is bearer instrument duty (BID). It’s a tax on instruments that don’t exist any more, never applies in practice, and raises no revenue. It looked like BID was finally going to get the axe last year – but still it survives. If they can’t abolish this sorry historical relic, then there’s little prospect of any serious reform.

Nigel Lawson used to pride himself on abolishing one tax every year. Rachel Reeves would shock everyone if she did the same – but it probably wouldn’t cost one penny of tax revenue.

Methodology

The starting point for the chart is the Office for Budget Responsibility’s March 2026 forecast for 2024-25 “National Accounts taxes”: £1,013.286bn, or 34.536% of GDP. Our chart treats the £58.870bn of VAT refunds as reducing VAT, rather than (as the OBR National Accounts do) having a higher amount of VAT and then a deduction. So our total is £954.416bn compared to the National Accounts’ £1,013.286bn.

The GDP denominator is OBR nominal GDP for 2024-25: £2,934.021bn.

We use 2024-25 because it is the latest complete OBR outturn year with a full all-tax taxonomy. There are newer monthly figures from ONS and HMRC, but they are either provisional, cash-basis, or less convenient for a complete map of the tax system.

The underlying numbers are official, but there is no single official “right” way to group taxes. So the classification is ours, constructed to be helpful, and group taxes by the thing being taxed: employment, asset income, consumption, business profits, property, wealth, environmental externalities, and so on.

Income tax on dividends and savings interest is taken from HMRC’s Table 2.6 Income Tax liabilities by income source, scaled to the OBR income-tax total used in the chart. Income tax on rents is estimated from HMRC’s Table 3.7 property-income distribution by total-income band, applying broad 2024-25 non-savings income tax rates.

Some lines are awkward in a sunburst chart. Negative receipts, such as petroleum revenue tax repayments and some income-tax repayment lines, are netted into their parent totals rather than displayed as positive slices.

A few tax-like receipts, such as the TV licence fee, some regulatory levies, and visa charges are included because the OBR includes them in National Accounts taxes (they are “unrequited“). There are some surprising entries in that category – ATOL (the £2.50 compulsory, per-passenger fee paid by travel operators for flight-inclusive package holidays) was reclassified as a tax by the ONS in April 2012. Others (like passport fees) are not included because the OBR does not consider them taxes (they are “requited”).

Sources were:

The code that generated the chart is available on our GitHub, together with the underlying data.


Thanks to B for help with the data. Chart created using Apache ECharts, by the Apache Software Foundation and contributors (Apache-2.0).

Photo “Jenga work” by santibon, CC BY-NC-ND 2.0, modified by Tax Policy Associates.

Footnotes

  1. The first version of this article said 85. We apologise for the error. ↩︎

  2. i.e. income tax, National Insurance contributions and the apprenticeship levy. Employer NICs and the apprenticeship levy belong in this category because they are, economically, a tax on employment income. ↩︎

  3. We split income tax into its constituent elements – work, dividends, rent, investments, but count it as one tax in this total number. ↩︎

  4. There are two oddities: bearer instrument duty (a very old tax, these days probably never applied in practice) and the Electricity Generator Levy (essentially a regulatory fix, intended to never be applied). Then some taxes which are too new to yield revenue in 2024/25: CBAM, Vaping products duty, Extended producer responsibility fees, Building Safety Levy, Scottish aggregates tax, the International student levy, and multinational top-up tax. ↩︎

13 responses to “90 UK taxes. On one chart.”

  1. Graeme Coles-Andrew avatar
    Graeme Coles-Andrew

    Fascinating chart. Lighthouse dues! Note that passport fees are indeed included on it.

  2. Sophia Hampton avatar
    Sophia Hampton

    Is the business improvement district levy included in the ‘other small taxes’ section?

  3. Gary Bandy avatar

    Your numbers are confusing. You say there are 85 taxes in the opening sentence, but if 81 are on the chart and 8 aren’t then the total is 89. Or perhaps there are only 77 on the chart and not 81. Or is this all to do with footnote 2 treating one tax as four?

    1. Dan Neidle avatar

      I think it now adds up!

  4. jonathan West avatar
    jonathan West

    And yet it seems we are to get another levy in the form of the S&S ISA interest levy – just so the interest does not count towards the exempted interest income allowance.

  5. Anthony Dell avatar
    Anthony Dell

    Another terrific article. Compared to Hong Kong, Singapore, or even Estonia, the UK tax system is far too complex and is evidently destructive to business and growth. Ever growing benefits and debt are also a huge concern for the economy. Wouldn’t it be wonderful to have a government with the courage and vision to start fixing the issues.

  6. Mr. justin clayton avatar
    Mr. justin clayton

    ‘Income tax on work’? What about Income tax on Pensions? I can see “savings income tax”, but does that just cover interest.

    1. David Cairns avatar
      David Cairns

      Good question. The OBR/HMRC data imply that the ‘income from work’ includes all income that it is captured through the PAYE system which includes, therefore, income tax on pensions from former employers and SIPPs. As state pensions in 2024/25 were lower than personal allowance no tax would have been payable on them on the assumption that they are treated as the first tranche of income (as they usually are for PAYE purposes). It is unclear how the tax reliefs (top ups) on pension contributions are dealt with.
      There are probably similar quirks in other parts of the data but, in my view, they do not detract from the the important messages in the table.

    2. Sean Humphrey avatar
      Sean Humphrey

      Pension is an income

    3. Pikolo avatar

      Pensions are (intended as) a way of deferring tax on work.

      A small fraction of pension taxation will go through Wealth – Inheritance tax

  7. John Barnett avatar
    John Barnett

    Would it be possible to have a % of total tax receipts as well as a % of GDP on the slider?

  8. Neil Fletcher avatar
    Neil Fletcher

    I cannot see if you included a massive administrative burden Multinational Top-up Tax?

    1. Dan Neidle avatar

      there wasn’t any in 2024/25 but I should mention in the footnotes

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