Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    Twitter LinkedIn
    • FREE Email Newsletters
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Subscribe
    • Contact Us
    Twitter LinkedIn
    Podcast
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    • News
      • Arable & Agronomy
      • Dealership News
      • Environmental Land Management Scheme/Policy
      • Event News
      • Health & Safety
      • Machinery
      • People
      • World News
    • Farm Machinery
      • Amenity & Maintenance
      • Cultivations
      • Drilling
      • Grassland Equipment
      • Harvesting
      • Muck & Slurry
      • Sprayers
      • Telehandlers
      • Tractors
      • Tractor of the Year
      • Tyres & Tracks
      • Whatever happened to?
    • Precision Farming
    • Markets & Policy
    • Profiles
      • National Arable and Grassland Awards
      • Company Profiles
      • Reader Profiles
    • Livestock
      • Beef
      • Dairy
      • Sheep
    • Magazines
      1. October 2025 issue
      2. September 2025 issue
      3. August 2025 issue
      4. 2025 Drills and Seeds supplement
      5. July 2025 issue
      6. June 2025 issue
      7. Cereals event guide 2025
      8. May 2025 issue
      9. April 2025 issue
      10. March 2025 issue
      11. 2025 Tyre Developments supplement
      12. February 2025 issue
      13. National Arable and Grassland Awards supplement
      14. January 2025 issue
      15. December 2024 issue
      16. November 2024 issue
      17. October 2024 issue
      18. September 2024 issue
      19. August 2024 Issue
      20. 2024 Drills and Seeds supplement
      21. July 2024 Issue
      22. Cereals Supplement
      23. June 2024 Issue
      24. May 2024 Issue
      25. April 2024 Issue
      26. Tyres and Tracks Supplement
      27. March 2024 Issue
      28. National Arable & Grassland Award – Meet the Finalists
      29. February 2024 Issue
      30. January 2024 Issue
      31. December 2023
      32. Agritechnica Preview Supplement
      33. November 2023
      34. October 2023
      Featured

      October 2025 issue available now

      By Matthew TiltOctober 1, 2025
      Recent

      October 2025 issue available now

      October 1, 2025

      September 2025 issue available now

      September 1, 2025

      August 2025 issue available now

      August 1, 2025
    • Events
    • Podcast
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer
    Markets & Policy

    Pressure builds to reverse inheritance tax plans

    Matthew TiltBy Matthew TiltJune 30, 20252 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    AdobeStock

    Following the announcement of a partial U-turn over welfare cuts by the Labour government, there are fresh calls for it to abandon planned changes to inheritance tax.

    The Country Land and Business Association (CLA) has led this call, following a recent survey which found that cutting inheritance tax relief for farmers would negatively impact the Treasury’s revenue.

    It found that more than 200,000 jobs could be lost during this Parliament, producing a net loss of £1.9bn for the Treasury and cutting £14.9bn from the economy.

    Jonathan Roberts, CLA external affairs director, has said: “Rachel Reeves is going to have to find billions of pounds to fund the government’s U-turns on welfare reform. We have an easy solution to help her find the cash – stop attacking family farms and businesses.

    “As things stand, the government’s inheritance tax reforms will reduce tax revenue by £1.9bn and see 200,000 jobs lost. It is a policy she simply cannot afford to implement.”

    Now the Prime Minister is facing a rebellion from more than 40 MPs, according to national media, with Labour MP Sam Rushworth reportedly keen to bring forward different recommendations.

    A ‘rural growth group’ is also calling for the government to revise the threshold at which tax would be due.

    CLA President Victoria Vyvyan said: “Sam Rushworth MP confirms what we already know: many Labour MPs know the government’s farming tax raid is wrong. They see what it’s doing to small businesses – costing jobs, draining investment, and weakening local economies.

    “Raising the threshold is a small fix, but it won’t touch the real damage. Family businesses – including farms – will still be hit hard, with no way to plan for the future.

    “The CLA clawback proposal is fair, responsible, and targeted. It raises revenue, and protects multi-generational businesses. It also gives this vital industry the breathing room to survive, grow, and keep people in work.”

    Tweet
    Share
    Share
    Pin
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email
    Previous ArticleDefra doubles funding to tackle agricultural pollution
    Next Article Tools to tackle blackgrass at Hutchinsons demonstration day
    Matthew Tilt
    • Twitter
    • LinkedIn

    Machinery editor for Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer. Matt has worked as an agricultural machinery journalist for five years, following time spent in his family’s Worcestershire contracting business. When he’s not driving or writing about the latest farm equipment, he can be found in his local cinema, or with his headphones in, reading a good book.

    Read Similar Stories

    Wind energy support tool for landowners launched

    October 2, 2025

    New commissioner role to oversee tenant farming sector

    September 29, 2025

    NFU Sugar and British Sugar agree 2026/27 sugar beet contracts

    August 18, 2025
    Most Read Stories

    Tickets go on sale for Cereals 2026

    October 3, 2025

    Minor increase to tractor registrations

    October 3, 2025

    Tractor of the Year 2026 – TotYBot – Coming Robotics AgAR X4

    October 2, 2025
    Farm Contractor & Large Scale Farmer

    The UK's leading agricultural machinery journal

    Twitter LinkedIn
    © 2024 MA Agriculture Ltd, a Mark Allen Group company

    Privacy Policy | Cookies Policy | Terms & Conditions

    • Farmers Weekly
    • AA Farmer
    • Poultry News
    • Pig World

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.