About Business Rates

Business Rates Explanatory Notes 2024/2025

Non-Domestic Rates 

Non-domestic rates (business rates) collected by the Council are the way that those who occupy non-domestic property contribute towards the cost of local services. Under the business rates retention arrangements introduced from 1st April 2013, the Council keeps a proportion of the business rates paid locally. This provides a direct financial incentive for the Council to work with local businesses to create a favourable local environment for growth since the Council will benefit from growth in business rates revenues. The money, together with revenue from council tax payers, locally generated income and grants provided by the Government, is used to pay for the services provided by the Council and other local authorities in your area. Further information about the business rates system, including reliefs, may be obtained at www.gov.uk  

Rateable Value 

Apart from properties that are exempt from business rates, each non-domestic property has a rateable value which is set by the valuation officers of the Valuation Office Agency (VOA), an agency of Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs. They draw up and maintain a full list of all rateable values, available on their website at www.gov.uk/valuation 

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 revaluation that came into effect on 1st April 2023, this date was set as 1st April 2022. 

The valuation officer may alter the value if circumstances change. The ratepayer (and certain others who have an interest in the property) can request a change to the value if they believe it is wrong, through the Check, Challenge, and Appeal (CCA) process. Full details on your rights of appeal are available from the Valuation Office Agency. The Council can only backdate any business rates rebate to the date from which any change to the list is to have effect.

Further information about the grounds on which appeals may be made and the process for doing so can be found on www.gov.uk

You can contact the VOA.

National Non-Domestic Rating Multiplier 

The Council works out the business rates bill by multiplying the rateable value of the property by the appropriate multiplier. There are two multipliers: 

  • the standard non-domestic rating multiplier (54.6 pence) and 
  • the small business non-domestic rating multiplier (49.9 pence) - frozen for five years. 

The current multipliers are shown on the front of 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 according to formulae set by legislation. In his autumn budget statement the Chancellor confirmed the multipliers for 2024/25. 

Business Rates Instalments 

Payment of business rate bills is automatically set on a ten-monthly cycle (April to January) to cover the whole year. However, the Government has put in place regulations that allow businesses to require the Council to enable payments to be made through twelve monthly instalments. If you wish to take up this offer, you should contact the Council as soon as possible.

Revaluation 

All rateable values are reassessed at a general revaluation. The most recent revaluation took effect from 1 April 2023. Revaluations make sure each ratepayer pays their fair contribution and no more, by ensuring that the share of the national rates bill paid by any one ratepayer reflects changes over time in the value of their property relative to others. 

A general revaluation will take place every three years.

Supporting Small Business Relief - SSBR: the Government has introduced SSBR to support small business from large changes in rate liability where ratepayers will receive less or no small business rate relief.

Where entitlement to small business rate relief has been lost resulting from the revaluation, the SSBR scheme restricts the annual increase in business rates bills to £600 each year.

Unoccupied Property Rating 

Business rates will not be payable in the first three months that a property is empty. This is extended to six months in the case of certain industrial properties. After this period rates are payable in full. For properties owned by charities and community amateur sports clubs the unoccupied property rate is zero in most cases. In addition, there are a number of exemptions from the unoccupied property rate. Full details on exemptions can be obtained from the Council. 

Business Rate Reliefs 

Depending on inpidual circumstances, a ratepayer may be eligible for a rate relief (a reduction in your rates bill). There are a range of available reliefs. Some of the reliefs are set out below. The Government sometimes introduces new reliefs in their Budget.

Charity and Community Amateur Sports Club Relief 

Charities and registered Community Amateur Sports Clubs are entitled to 80% relief where the property is occupied by the charity, 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).

The Council has discretion to give further relief on the remaining bill. Details can be obtained from the Council.

Retail Relief 

In the Autumn Budget Statement, the Government announced another extension to the expanded retail, hospitality & leisure discount. From the 1 April 2024 some ratepayers will qualify for a 75% discount. All ratepayers qualifying for expanded retail, hospitality & leisure discount will be capped to a maximum relief of £110,000 for all their properties. Qualification is subject to new Subsidy Control regime commenced from 4 January 2023. If your bill shows retail relief, you should check that you comply with the new UK subsidy control regime.

Subsidy Control

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 government's website

Local Discounts 

The Council has a general power to grant discretionary local discounts. Details can be obtained from the Council. 

Small Business Rate Relief 

Small business rate relief is available to ratepayers of a property with a rateable value which does not exceed £50,999. Qualifying ratepayers will have their bill calculated using the lower small business non-domestic rating multiplier, rather than the standard national non-domestic rating multiplier. 

In addition, if the sole or main property is shown on the rating list with a rateable value which does not exceed £15,000, the ratepayer will receive a percentage reduction in rates for this property of up to a maximum of 100%. For a property with a rateable value of not more than £12,000, the ratepayer will receive a 100% reduction in their rates bill.

This percentage reduction (relief) is only available to ratepayers who occupy either- 

(a) one property, or

(b) one main property and other additional properties providing those additional properties each have a rateable value which does not exceed £2,899. 

In London the rateable value of the property mentioned in (a), or the aggregate rateable value of all the properties mentioned in (b), must not exceed £27,999 on each day for which relief is being sought. If the rateable value, or aggregate rateable value, increases above those levels, relief will cease from the day of the increase. 

The Government has introduced additional support for small businesses. For those businesses that take on an additional property which would normally have meant the loss of small business rate relief, the Government has confirmed that they will be allowed to keep that relief for a period of twelve months. 

Where a ratepayer meets the eligibility criteria and has not received the relief they should contact the Council. Provided the ratepayer continues to satisfy the conditions for relief which apply at the relevant time as regards the property and the ratepayer, they will automatically continue to receive relief in each new valuation period. 

Certain changes in circumstances will need to be notified to the Council by a ratepayer who is in receipt of relief (other changes will be picked up by the Council). The changes which should be notified are- 

(a) the ratepayer taking up occupation of an additional property, and 

(b) an increase in the rateable value of a property occupied by the ratepayer in an area other than the area of the Council which granted the relief. 

Business Rate Supplements

The Business Rate Supplements Act 2009 enables levying authorities - County Councils, Unitary District Councils and, in London, the Greater London Authority - to levy a supplement on the business rate to support additional projects aimed at economic development of the area. Business Rate Supplements (BRS) are not applicable to properties with a rateable value of £50,000 or below and authorities have discretion to increase that threshold. The total maximum BRS which may be levied by a levying authority is 2p per pound of rateable value. Levying authorities have the power to apply such reliefs to the BRS as they think appropriate and in such cases must include an explanation of the rules for the application of those reliefs in the final prospectus for the BRS.

The BRS applicable in London is being levied by the Greater London Authority in relation to the Crossrail project. Further information may be found in the Crossrail BRS final prospectus which is available at www.london.gov.uk  

Rating Advisers 

Ratepayers do not have to be represented in discussions about their rateable value or their rates bill. 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 Supplied with Demand Notices

Information relating to the relevant and previous financial years in regard to the gross expenditure of the Council is available at:

Council Tax Budget 2024/2025

Last Modified: 26/02/2024 15:11:01