Official Statistics

National non-domestic rates collected by local authorities in England 2022 to 2023

Updated 24 January 2024

Applies to England

This release provides data on non-domestic rating income collected by local authorities in 2022-23, including data relating to the amount of business rates reliefs given to businesses. Amounts of reliefs given in 2022-23 are not directly comparable to those in 2021-22, so we have not made year on year comparisons throughout the release. The data in this version of the release are based on returns received by 10 January 2024. For 35 authorities, data are finalised after an audit of accounts. For the remaining 274 authorities, data are provisional.

This is an update to the release first published on 10 July 2023. These changes only have a small effect on the England totals compared to the previous release. We will continue to update this release as audited returns are submitted, but we do not expect any major change in the figures.

1. In this release:

  • Local authorities reported that the non-domestic rates income for 2022-23 was £22.9 billion. This amount is what authorities collected after all reliefs, accounting adjustments and sums retained outside the rates retention scheme are taken into consideration.
  • Local authorities reported that they granted a total of £7.7 billion of relief from business rates in 2022-23. Of this £1.7 billion was the net cost of small business rate relief, £3.2 billion was the cost of other mandatory relief and £2.8 billion was the cost of discretionary relief, of which £1.7 billion was the retail, hospitality and leisure relief and £1.1 billion was the COVID-19 additional relief awarded in respect of 2021-22.
  • Total relief provided to charitable occupations (that is both mandatory and discretionary relief) amounted to £2.1 billion in respect of 2022-23.
  • Authorities granted £2.2 billion relief under the Small Business Rate relief scheme for 2022-23.
  • Local authorities reported a net decrease in appeals provision of £369 million and losses in collection of £175 million in 2022-23.

Release date: 12 July 2023 (updated 24 January 2024)
Date of next release: July 2024
Contact: 0303 444 8433 / nndr.statistics@levellingup.gov.uk (Responsible Statistician: Jo Coleman)
Media enquiries: 0303 444 1209 / NewsDesk@levellingup.gov.uk

2. Introduction

This release has been compiled by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC) and it provides information on national non-domestic rates and associated information for the financial years 2018-19 to 2022-23. This information has been derived from the national non-domestic rates (NNDR3) returns submitted on behalf of all 309 billing authorities that were in existence in 2022-23 in England.

Final returns are those that have been submitted following an audit of their accounts. Where audit of accounts for 2022-23 have not yet been completed, we publish data based on authorities’ provisional unaudited accounts. Due to ongoing delays to local authority audits, we are publishing the provisional unaudited data for every local authority. These returns have been approved by the Chief Financial Officer to confirm that the form had been completed in accordance with schedule 7B of the Local Government Finance Act 1988 and the regulations made under it.

In our original publication in July 2023, all data was provisional. In the latest update published on 24 January 2024, 274 of the forms were provisional. Some changes will also be as a result of changes to the provisional data supplied.

We will update this data release in due course when finalised or updated figures are available, however we do not expect any major change in these figures. The next update to this release is expected to be in January 2024.

Non-domestic rates, or business rates, are collected by billing authorities and are the way in which those that occupy a non-domestic property (or hereditament) contribute towards local services. The introduction of the business rates retention scheme in 2013-14 allows local authorities to retain a proportion of the revenue that is generated in their area.

Apart from properties that are exempt from business rates, such as agricultural land, parks and places of worship, each non-domestic property has a rateable value which is set by the Valuation Office Agency (VOA). Billing authorities work out the business rates liability for every hereditament by multiplying the rateable value of the property by the appropriate multiplier. There are two multipliers, the non-domestic multiplier and the small business non-domestic rate multiplier. The former is higher because it includes a supplement which is used to fund the Small Business Rate Relief scheme, which is designed to help small businesses meet the cost of their business rates.

In addition to the Small Business Rate Relief scheme, rateable properties may also be eligible for other discounts or reliefs on their business rates bills. Some of these are mandatory i.e. they are automatic entitlements in any billing authority area. Business rates payers may also receive discretionary relief which are granted at a billing authority’s discretion. Further information about the types of reliefs available are presented in Table 2.

2.1 Technical Information

Please see the accompanying technical notes document for further details.

Revaluation and transitional relief

Every few years, the government adjusts the rateable value of business properties to reflect changes in the property market. This is known as a revaluation. At revaluation, the Government also revises the business rates multiplier to reflect the aggregate change in rateable values. As the revaluation is not designed to raise any more or less tax, the Government adjusts the multiplier.

At a revaluation, the Government also puts in place a transitional scheme that protects small and medium business ratepayers from significant step-changes in bills, by phasing-in increases over a number of years. The net transitional arrangements shown in Table 1 reflects the difference between revenue foregone and additional revenue collected, because the rates bills of ratepayers are being phased up or down as a result of the transitional scheme. The previous transitional scheme lasted from the 2017 revaluation to March 2022. Therefore in 2022-23, there are only transitional arrangements figures in respect of previous years. In 2022-23, authorities could give the same support to businesses using the supporting small business relief (a discretionary relief), meaning that the supporting small business relief granted is slightly higher than usual in 2022-23.

Small business rates relief

In the 2016 Budget, Government announced a permanent doubling of small business rates relief and changes to the thresholds, meaning that 100% relief is given to all businesses that have a rateable value of below £12,000, and tapering of the relief for businesses with a rateable value between £12,000 and £15,000. This was previously a temporary doubling that required an extension each year. The threshold at which a higher multiplier is applied was increased from £18,000 (or £25,500 in Greater London) to £51,000.

Multipliers

The Government sets the multipliers for each financial year for England according to formulae set by legislation. Since 2018-19, this has reflected the Consumer Price Index (CPI) from the September preceding the start of the financial year. Prior to this, the Retail Price Index (RPI) had been used.

Additionally, the Government capped the increase in the multiplier at 2% in 2014-15 and 2015-16, and froze the multiplier in 2021-22 and 2022-23, to provide business rate payers with additional support. This, and the change to the CPI has had a knock on effect to the multiplier to subsequent years, which authorities are compensated for through a Section 31 grant.

2.2 Special Factors Affecting 2020-21 to 2022-23

In 2020-21 the government implemented many measures in response to the coronavirus pandemic. In relation to business rates, the existing retail discount relief was expanded into a 100% relief for retail, hospitality and leisure businesses. This was originally referred to as the expanded retail discount relief, but is referred to in this release as the retail, hospitality and leisure relief. A relief for nurseries was also introduced. These two reliefs were granted by local authorities and funded through section 31 grants. The reliefs were continued in 2021-22, though they only gave 100% business rates relief for the first three months of the financial year (April to June) and 66% for the remainder of the year, with a maximum value of £110,000 per business. In 2022-23 the relief was only 50% but with the same cap per business. This means the amounts of those reliefs given are not directly comparable across years. This also affects total net rates income and may affect the amount of other reliefs granted, so we have not made year on year comparisons throughout the release.

In 2021-22 the government introduced the COVID-19 Additional Relief Fund (CARF), making £1.5 billion available for local authorities to give as discretionary support for businesses affected by the pandemic but ineligible for existing business rates support. This relief was available in respect of 2021-22 only. However, the majority of the CARF relief was granted in the financial year 2022-23 in respect of 2021-22, and so is included in Table 2 on two different lines: Relief in respect of current year of which is CARF, in 2021-22, and Adjustments to relief in respect of previous years of which is CARF, in 2022-23.

3. National non-domestic rates collected by local authorities

Table 1 provides details of the total amount of national non-domestic rates local authorities collected in 2022-23 and the reliefs they granted. The multipliers used are also shown. The national non-domestic multiplier in 2022-23 included a 1.3p supplement to fund the Small Business Rate Relief scheme. Table 1a has been additionally included to show the breakdown of the losses in collection and net addition to appeals provision, to aid interpretation of these figures. Chart 1 shows the flow from gross rates to net rates in 2022-23. Chart 2 shows how gross and net rates have changed since 2013-14.

  • Local authorities reported that the non-domestic rating income for 2022-23 was £22.9 billion. This amount is what authorities collected after all reliefs, accounting adjustments and sums retained outside the rates retention scheme are taken into consideration.
  • Local authorities reported that they granted a total of £7.7 billion of relief from business rates in 2022-23.
  • Local authorities reported a net decrease in appeals provision of £369 million in 2022-23. This was made up of an increase in the appeals provision (£720 million), minus the amount charged against the existing provision in-year (£1.1 billion).
  • Local authorities reported losses in collection of £175 million in 2022-23. This was composed mostly of changes in the allowance for losses in collection (£164 million), rather than the amount lost as written off bad debt in-year (£11 million).

Table 1: National non-domestic rates collected by local authorities financial year 2018-19 to financial year 2022-23 (all figures £ million)

Year 2018 to 2019 2019 to 2020 2020 to 2021 [Note 6] 2021 to 2022 [Note 6] 2022 to 2023 [Note 6]
Gross rates payable in year 29,957 30,933 30,942 30,801 30,731 [R]
   Total cost of reliefs 4,483 5,090 16,031 10,275 7,684 [R]
   Of which net cost of Small Business Rate relief 1,258 1,416 1,601 1,617 1,675 [R]
   Of which other mandatory relief 2,995 3,071 3,127 3,388 3,216 [R]
   Of which discretionary relief 229 603 11,303 5,270 2,793
Gross Rates Payable in year less total cost of reliefs 25,474 25,842 14,912 20,526 23,047 [R]
   Net cost of transitional arrangement -5 83 192 182 121
   Of which additional revenue received in current year because reduction delayed [Note 1] 657 354 207 147 0
   Of which additional revenue received in respect of previous years because reduction delayed -9 7 47 69 75
   Of which (less) revenue foregone in current year because reduction delayed [Note 1] 661 324 155 84 0
   Of which (less) revenue foregone in respect of previous years because reduction delayed -8 -46 -92 -50 -45
Net Rates Yield (Gross Rates Payable plus net cost of Transition) 25,470 25,925 15,103 20,708 23,167 [R]
   Total cost of accounting adjustments 282 247 1,692 -211 -194 [R]
   Of which losses in collection [Note 2] 181 301 821 136 175
   Of which net addition to appeals provision [Note 3] 101 -54 870 -348 -369 [R]
   Of which interest payable 0 0 0 0 0
Other deductions from collectable rates [Note 4] 91 179 288 278 217
   Total Disregarded Amounts 117 155 148 199 220 [R]
   Of which amounts retained in respect of Designated Areas [Note 5] 52 83 64 106 110 [R]
   Of which amounts retained in respect of Renewable Energy schemes 65 72 85 93 109
   Of which amounts retained in respect of Shale Gas 0 0 0 0 0
Non-domestic rating income from rates retention scheme (Net Rates yield less Accounting adjustments, Other deductions & Disregarded amounts) 24,979 25,344 12,976 20,442 22,925 [R]
Year 2018 to 2019 2019 to 2020 2020 to 2021 2021 to 2022 2022 to 2023
Small business rate multiplier (pence) 48.0 49.1 49.9 49.9 49.9
National non-domestic rates multiplier (pence) 49.3 50.4 51.2 51.2 51.2
Number of hereditaments on rating list as at 30 Sept (`000s) 1,882 1,943 1,976 1,996 2,006
Total aggregate rateable value of all hereditaments on rating list as at 30 Sept (million pounds) 63,213 63,637 64,045 63,910 63,634

[R] 2022-23 data revised since the original publication of this release. 35 final post-audit returns are included in this table, with provisional data used for the remaining authorities (274). This release will be updated when more final returns are available, and we do not expect any major change to the data.
[Note 1] The transitional scheme for 2017-18 onwards expired in 2022-23. Therefore, there are only transitional arrangements figures in respect of previous years reported in 2022-23. In 2022-23, authorities could give the same support to businesses using the supporting small business relief (a discretionary relief), and so what would normally be the cost of the transitional scheme is included in the Discretionary Reliefs figure.
[Note 2] Losses in collection comprise both losses in collection in-year relating to write-offs and additions reflecting authorities’ view of their need in future to write off bad debt – see Table 1a for more details of the large increase in 2020-21.
[Note 3] Net addition to the appeals provision comprises both deductions relating to the use of the provision and additions reflecting authorities’ view of their need in future to make refunds to ratepayers as a result of changes to rating lists – see Table 1a for more details of the large increase in 2020-21.
[Note 4] Other deductions from collectable rates includes an allowance for cost of collection & legal costs, a special authority deduction for the City of London, and the net cost of transitional protection payments made to authorities to reverse the effects of transitional arrangements.
[Note 5] Designated Areas comprises Enterprise Zones & New Development Deal areas.
[Note 6] In 2020-21 and to a lesser extent in 2021-22 and 2022-23, the coronavirus pandemic caused parts of the figures to be different from the norm. Discretionary reliefs were far higher than usual. This was driven mostly by the introduction of the retail, hospitality and leisure relief in response to the coronavirus pandemic, and in 2022-23 by the COVID-19 additional relief paid in respect of 2021-22, but the presence of those reliefs may also have affected the levels of other reliefs. Therefore, the amount of net income and of discretionary reliefs is not comparable between years from 2019-20 onwards.

Table 1a: Further details of accounting adjustments on national non-domestic rates financial year 2018-19 to financial year 2022-23

Year 2018 to 2019 2019 to 2020 2020 to 2021 2021 to 2022 2022 to 2023
Losses in collection 181 301 821 136 175 [R]
Of which losses in collection in excess of the allowance [Note 1] 17 34 17 -3 11 [R]
Of which change in allowance for losses in collection [Note 2] 164 267 805 139 164 [R]
Net addition to appeals provision 101 -54 870 -348 -369 [R]
Of which amount charged in-year to appeals provision [Note 3] -637 -691 -694 -933 -1,089
   of which in relation to the 2010 ratings list -456 -257 -187 -168 -153
   of which in relation to the 2017 ratings list -182 -434 -508 -765 -937
Of which change in appeals provision [Note 4] 738 637 1,565 585 720 [R]
   of which in relation to the 2010 ratings list -23 100 31 -24 -70
   of which in relation to the 2017 ratings list 761 537 1,534 609 790 [R]

[R] 2022-23 data revised since the original publication of this release. 35 final post-audit returns are included in this table, with provisional data used for the remaining authorities (274). This release will be updated when more final returns are available, and we do not expect any major change to the data.
[Note 1] Sums written off as bad debt during the year in excess of the amount that authorities had already allowed for through their allowance for non-collection.
[Note 2] The increase in the allowance for non-collection (or ‘bad debt’) represents a deduction from authorities’ income for the year, reflecting their view of the sums currently unpaid by ratepayers that authorities believe they will never collect.
[Note 3] Authorities set aside money each year in provisions to enable them to finance backdated reductions to a ratepayer’s rates liabilities following an alteration to a rating list (usually as a result of appeals). Amounts charged against the provision in a year, following the alteration of a rating list, do not affect the authority’s income in that year and so are deducted from the total adjustment.
[Note 4] Amounts added to the provision reduce an authority’s income for the year. The amounts added reflect authorities’ views of how much they need to set aside in respect of future reductions in the year’s rates liability, plus additions or reductions in respect of amounts already set aside in provisions for past years. In 2020-21 some of this change to the appeals provision was in respect of potential appeals for a ‘material change of circumstances’ in respect of the coronavirus pandemic. In 2021, the Valuation Office Authority ruled that the pandemic did not constitute a material change of circumstances, so in 2021-22 most of those amounts were subtracted from the provision.

3.1 Chart 1: Breakdown of Gross Rates Payable

Chart 1 shows how reliefs and other adjustments are deducted from gross rates payable to arrive at the net business rates income for 2022-23.

3.2 Chart 2: Business Rates over Time

Chart 2 shows that gross rates payable and net rates income were steadily increasing until the pandemic. Gross rates payable has been stable because the business rates multiplier and number of businesses subject to rates remained stable. Net income fell sharply due to the retail, hospitality and leisure relief introduced in response to the pandemic but has increased in the last two years due to changes in those reliefs.

3.3 Map 1: Net Rates Income in England

Data covering the amount of business rates income and reliefs granted for each local authority in England are in the tables accompanying this release. Map 1 provides an overview of how net business rates income in 2022-23 differs across England. Authorities have been split into five ranges of net business rates income with an equal number of authorities in each group. An additional box on the map shows a larger image of London and the surrounding authorities.

4. National non-domestic rate reliefs granted by local authorities

Table 2 shows figures for mandatory reliefs and discretionary reliefs granted by billing authorities. Mandatory reliefs are automatic entitlements in any billing authority area whereas discretionary reliefs are granted at a billing authority’s discretion. Chart 3 shows how the largest reliefs have changed since 2018-19.

  • Of the £7.7 billion relief granted from business rates, £4.9 billion was mandatory relief (including small business rate relief) in 2022-23.
  • Local authorities granted a total of £2.8 billion of discretionary relief in 2022-23. Of this £2.7 billion was funded through Section 31 grants.
  • Total relief provided to charitable occupations (that is both mandatory and discretionary relief) amounted to £2.1 billion in respect of 2022-23.
  • Authorities granted £2.2 billion of relief under the Small Business Rate relief scheme for 2022-23.
  • Receipts from the supplement paid by some businesses (additional yield) to fund the Small Business Rate relief scheme in 2022-23 was £626 million.
  • The amount of relief granted to empty premises in 2022-23 was £1.1 billion.
  • The amount of retail, hospitality and leisure relief granted in 2022-23 was £1.7 billion.
  • The amount of COVID-19 additional relief (CARF) in 2022-23 was £1.1 billion. This reflects the amount of CARF relief granted in 2022-23 in respect of 2021-22.

Table 2: Cost of reliefs from national non-domestic rates financial year 2018-19 to financial year 2022-23 (all figures £ million)

Year 2018 to 2019 2019 to 2020 2020 to 2021 [Note 6] 2021 to 2022 [Note 6] 2022 to 2023 [Note 6]
Total cost of mandatory relief 4,253 4,487 4,728 5,005 4,891 [R]
Of which net cost of small business rate relief 1,258 1,416 1,601 1,617 1,675 [R]
   Of which net cost of small business rate relief in respect of current year 1,190 1,338 1,470 1,535 1,585
      Of which relief provided in year 1,820 1,970 2,100 2,161 2,211
      Of which additional yield generated from the small business supplement 631 632 630 626 626
   Of which net cost of small business rate relief in respect of previous years 68 77 131 82 90 [R]
Of which other mandatory relief 2,995 3,071 3,127 3,388 3,216 [R]
   Of which total other mandatory relief in respect of current year 2,977 3,069 3,151 3,276 3,221 [R]
      Of which charitable occupation 1,933 2,011 2,021 2,040 2,036
      Of which community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) 20 21 22 22 22
      Of which rural rate relief 4 4 4 4 4 [R]
      Of which telecomms relief 0 0 0 2 [z]
      Of which public lavatories relief [z] [z] [z] 5 5
      Of which partially occupied hereditaments 24 26 22 16 13
      Of which empty premises 996 1,006 1,082 1,187 1,141
   Of which other mandatory relief in respect of previous years [Note 1] 18 2 -24 113 -5 [R]
Total cost of discretionary relief 229 603 11,303 5,270 2,793 [R]
Of which total cost of unfunded discretionary relief 115 115 99 107 109
   Of which total cost of unfunded discretionary relief in respect of current year 110 112 98 101 103
      Of which charitable occupation 47 48 42 45 48
      Of which non-profit making bodies 38 37 31 33 36
      Of which Community Amateur Sports Clubs (CASCs) 1 1 1 1 1
      Of which rural shops etc 0 0 0 0 0
      Of which small rural businesses 1 1 1 1 1
      Of which other ratepayers under s47 21 22 20 20 16
      Of which hardship relief 2 2 3 1 0
   Of which total cost of unfunded discretionary relief in respect of previous years 5 3 1 6 5
Of which total cost of discretionary reliefs funded through Section 31 grants 114 488 11,204 5,163 2,685 [R]
   Of which total cost of discretionary reliefs funded through S31 grant in respect of current year [Note 2] 113 481 11,180 5,188 1,726 [R]
      Of which flooding relief 0 2 1 0 0
      Of which rural rate relief 4 4 4 4 4 [R]
      Of which local newspaper temporary relief 0 0 0 0 0
      Of which supporting small businesses relief [Note 3] 14 13 13 11 20
      Of which discretionary scheme relief 77 30 3 [z] [z]
      Of which pub relief 17 [z] [z] [z] [z]
      Of which retail, hospitality and leisure relief [Note 4] [z] 432 11,061 4,940 1,701 [R]
      Of which nursery relief [z] [z] 98 63 [z]
      Of which COVID-19 additional relief [Note 5] [z] [z] [z] 171 [z]
      Of which low carbon heat network relief [z] [z] [z] [z] 1
   Of which total cost of discretionary reliefs funded through S31 grant in respect of previous years [Note 1] 1 7 25 -25 959 [R]
      Of which COVID-19 additional relief [Note 5] [z] [z] [z] [z] 1,056
      Of which all other discretionary reliefs funded through S31 grant 1 7 25 -25 -97 [R]
TOTAL COST OF ALL RELIEFS 4,483 5,090 16,031 10,275 7,684 [R]

[R] 2022-23 data revised since the original publication of this release. 35 final post-audit returns are included in this table, with provisional data used for the remaining authorities (274). This release will be updated when more final returns are available, and we do not expect any major change to the data.
[Note 1] In 2021-22, the majority of the mandatory relief granted in respect of previous years was empty property relief. In 2022-23, the majority of discretionary relief granted in respect of previous years was COVID-19 additional relief which is reported separately due to the size.
[Note 2] Some discretionary reliefs that are funded through Section 31 grants are time limited. Therefore, relief will only be given for a certain number of years.
[Note 3] In 2022-23, authorities could give support to businesses in lieu of transitional relief using the supporting small business relief (a discretionary relief), and so what would normally be the cost of the transitional scheme is included in the Discretionary Reliefs figure.
[Note 4] The discretionary section 31 funded reliefs include the retail, hospitality and leisure relief which changed in scope and amount of relief granted between years. In 2019-20 the retail discount relief, was a discount of one third of the non-domestic rates bill for retail shops, restaurants pubs and cinemas with a rateable value of £51,000 or less. In 2020-21 this was expanded in response to the coronavirus pandemic to provide a 100% relief to all retail, hospitality and leisure businesses. In 2021-22 the relief gave a 100% discount for the first three months and then a 66% discount for the remaining months with a cap on the relief for each business of £105,000 per business, or £2 million per business where the business is in occupation of a property that was required, or would have been required, to close, based on the law and guidance applicable on 5 January 2021. In 2022-23 it was a 50% discount with a cap on the relief of £110,000 per business. This change in coverage and amount of relief means that the retail, hospitality and leisure relief in not comparable across years.
[Note 5] The COVID-19 additional relief fund (CARF) was a discretionary relief scheme for 2021-22 only. The amount granted in 2021-22 is the amount granted up to the end of March 2022. The majority of the relief was granted in 2022-23 in respect of 2021-22 which is reported under the adjustments to reliefs in respect of previous years.
[Note 6] In 2020-21 and to a lesser extent in 2021-22 and 2022-23, the coronavirus pandemic caused parts of the figures to be different from the norm. Discretionary reliefs were far higher than usual. This was driven mostly by the introduction of the retail, hospitality and leisure relief in response to the coronavirus pandemic, and in 2022-23 by the COVID-19 additional relief paid in respect of 2021-22, but the presence of those reliefs may also have affected the levels of other reliefs. Therefore, the amount of discretionary reliefs is not comparable between years from 2019-20 onwards.

4.1 Chart 3: Business Rates Reliefs over Time

Chart 3 shows that business rates reliefs have increased year-on-year since 2018-19, but the main driver of the recent increase in total relief is the retail, hospitality and leisure relief.

5. National non-domestic rate reliefs funded by Section 31 grants

A number of measures have been announced by the Chancellor in the Autumn Statements and Spring Budgets since 2012 that affect the national non-domestic rates scheme. Central government compensates local authorities for these changes and this compensation is made outside of the rate retention scheme by means of a Section 31 (S31) grant.

Table 3 shows the Section 31 grants paid to local authorities since 2018-19 to compensate them for the loss of income arising from the various national non-domestic rates measures shown below. They differ from the amounts shown in Table 2 which show the total amount of relief granted to business ratepayers under each of the measures. This is because this table reflects just the local authority share of retained business rates, which varies between 50% and 100%. Additionally, changes between years in this table are not directly comparable because these shares have changed in 2018-19, 2019-20, and 2020-21 due to rates retention pilots and increased retention as part of devolution deals.

  • Local authorities were due a total of £4.4 billion in Section 31 grant in 2022-23, of which £1.5 billion related to compensation for capping the increase of the Small Business Rates multiplier, £1.1 billion related to compensation for doubling of the Small Business Rates relief and changes of eligibility thresholds, £1.1 billion related to the retail, hospitality and leisure relief, and £748 million related to the COVID-19 additional relief.

Table 3: National non-domestic rates measures funded by Section 31 grants financial year 2018-19 to financial year 2022-23 (all figures £ million) [Note 1]

Year 2018 to 2019 [Note 6] 2019 to 2020 [Note 6] 2020 to 2021 [Note 6, Note 7] 2021 to 2022 [Note 7] 2022 to 2023 [Note 7]
Capping the increase in the small business rates multiplier [Note 2] 471 583 327 668 1,467 [R]
Doubling of the small business rates multiplier and changes of eligibility thresholds 1,065 1,054 1,014 1,030 1,102 [R]
Public lavatories relief [z] [z] [z] 5 3
Maintaining small business rates relief on “first” properties 4 3 5 4 4
Relief to newly built properties 0 0 0 0 0
Relief awarded on the occupation of “long-term empty” properties 0 0 0 0 0 [R]
Retail relief 0 6 4 4 -1
Flooding relief 0 1 1 0 0
In Lieu of Transitional relief 0 0 0 0 1
Rural Rate relief 3 3 2 2 2 [R]
Local Newspaper Temporary relief 0 0 0 0 0
Supporting Small Businesses relief [Note 3] 12 9 8 7 13
Discretionary Scheme relief 68 21 -1 -1 -1
Pub relief 13 0 0 0 0 [R]
Enterprise Zone relief provided in 100% Pilot Areas 11 5 3 3 2
Telecomms relief 0 0 0 3 0
Retail Discount relief [Note 4] [z] 309 7,117 3,212 1,091 [R]
Nursery relief [z] [z] 62 42 1
COVID-19 additional relief [Note 5] [z] [z] [z] 101 748
Low carbon heat networks relief [z] [z] [z] [z] 1
Freeports relief [z] [z] [z] [z] 0
Additional growth in Freeports [z] [z] [z] [z] 0
Total amount of reliefs funded by Section 31 grants 1,645 1,991 8,542 5,079 4,432 [R]

[R] 2022-23 data revised since the original publication of this release. 35 final post-audit returns are included in this table, with provisional data used for the remaining authorities (274). This release will be updated when more final returns are available, and we do not expect any major change to the data.
[Note 1] Amounts of Section 31 grant due include amounts due in respect of reliefs granted in-year in respect of previous years. Once a relief has expired, amounts in this table relate only to relief granted in respect of previous years.
[Note 2] The relief in respect of capping the small business rates multiplier is particularly high in 2022-23 as inflation increased more during 2022 than it did in the prior years. The cap was at the same level of 49.9p in 2022-23 as in previous years. This means the difference between the multiplier and what it would have been without the cap increased more than usual in those years.
[Note 3] In 2022-23, authorities could give support to businesses in lieu of transitional relief using the supporting small business relief (a discretionary relief), and so what would normally be the cost of the transitional scheme is compensated for as a section 31 payment in respect of the supporting small business relief.
[Note 4] The discretionary section 31 funded reliefs include the retail, hospitality and leisure relief which changed in scope and amount of relief granted between years. In 2019-20 the retail discount relief, was a discount of one third of the non-domestic rates bill for retail shops, restaurants pubs and cinemas with a rateable value of £51,000 or less. In 2020-21 this was expanded in response to the coronavirus pandemic to provide a 100% relief to all retail, hospitality and leisure businesses. In 2021-22 the relief gave a 100% discount for the first three months and then a 66% discount for the remaining months with a cap on the relief for each business of £105,000 per business, or £2 million per business where the business is in occupation of a property that was required, or would have been required, to close, based on the law and guidance applicable on 5 January 2021. In 2022-23 it was a 50% discount with a cap on the relief of £110,000 per business. This change in coverage and amount of relief means that the retail, hospitality and leisure relief is not comparable across years.
[Note 5] The COVID-19 additional relief fund (CARF) was a discretionary relief scheme for 2021-22 only. The amount granted in 2021-22 is the amount granted up to the end of March 2022. The majority of the relief was granted in 2022-23 in respect of 2021-22, which is compensated for by Section 31 grant in 2022-23.
[Note 6] Since 2017-18 some authorities have been able to retain more than a 50% share of income. The amount of share and authorities involved change from year to year from 2018-19 to 2020-21, and so annual figures in those are not directly comparable.
[Note 7] In 2020-21 and to a lesser extent in 2021-22 and 2022-23, the coronavirus pandemic caused parts of the figures to be different from the norm. Discretionary reliefs were far higher than usual. This was driven mostly by the introduction of the retail, hospitality and leisure relief in response to the coronavirus pandemic, and in 2022-23 by the COVID-19 additional relief paid in respect of 2021-22, but the presence of those reliefs may also have affected the levels of other reliefs and hence the Section 31 grants due.

6. Accompanying tables and open data

6.1 Symbols used

[R] = Revised since the previous update of this data [z] = not relevant
0 = zero or negligible (below £0.5 million)

6.2 Rounding

Where figures have been rounded, there may be a slight discrepancy between the total and the sum of constituent parts.

6.3 Tables

Accompanying tables are available to download alongside this release. These include Tables 1 to 3 for England and a copy of the NNDR3 form with the national-level and local authority-level figures for each cell.

6.4 Open data

These statistics are available in fully open and linkable data formats online.

6.5 Technical Notes

Please see the accompanying technical notes document for further details.
Information on Official Statistics is available via the UK Statistics Authority website.
Information about statistics at DLUHC is available via the Department’s website.