UK Councils Face Financial Reckoning: New Funding Deal Sparks Debate Over Winners, Losers, and Rising Tax Bills

A new three-year local government funding deal has been announced for English councils, introducing a 'Fair Funding' formula designed to prioritize urban areas with high social needs. This new system aims to reverse a decade of austerity, with ministers touting it as a fairer approach that will 'restore pride and opportunity in left-behind places' and allow local leaders to 'invest in getting back what has been lost – to bring back libraries, youth services, clean streets, and community hubs'. The government funding will be distributed with a higher weighting given to local authorities with high 'deprivation' scores, measured by factors such as income, employment, health, housing costs, and crime.
Under the new formula, several councils are set to receive significant spending power increases. These include deprived urban areas such as Manchester, Birmingham, Luton, Bradford, Coventry, Derby, Middlesbrough, and outer London boroughs like Haringey, Enfield, and Newham. Conversely, wealthier central London boroughs, including Kensington and Chelsea, Wandsworth, Westminster, the City of London, and the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead, alongside affluent home counties commuter belt councils like Surrey, are expected to lose out financially.
The settlement has, however, received a mixed and often critical reception. Some urban councils in the north and Midlands expressed disappointment, arguing that 'London’s suburbs' appeared to be the 'biggest winners' from the review, potentially leaving many of the most deprived communities facing further cuts after years of austerity. Leaders of county councils in English home counties and rural areas also criticized the deal, describing it as unfair and accusing ministers of 'cherrypicking' by disproportionately benefiting urban areas. The County Councils Network predicted that this approach would leave many of its members in financial trouble. Initial modelling by the Institute for Fiscal Studies had shown that a number of Labour-run inner London councils could lose significant grant funding, but an 11th-hour change to the formula, acknowledging the capital’s exceptionally high housing costs and dense concentrations of child poverty, significantly reduced London authorities’ exposure to the changes, further enraging some councils in Labour’s northern heartlands.
Regarding council tax, most councils, regardless of whether they are 'winners' or 'losers' in this settlement, are likely to increase bills in April to the maximum allowable of 4.99% for upper-tier authorities with social care responsibilities. The era when Conservative-run local authorities routinely froze council tax bills is considered over. Notably, a group of wealthy central London authorities, which already have relatively low council tax bills and high financial reserves but are expected to lose out on grant funding, will be allowed to set increases above the 4.99% maximum. The government believes these councils can absorb the loss of grant funding due to their high reserves and ability to levy second home premiums. Some Reform-led councils, such as Kent, are net gainers but aspire to limit or cut council tax bills. However, at other Reform-led authorities like Durham and Warwickshire, cabinet papers have revealed that reduced council tax rises would necessitate millions of pounds of additional cuts to already threadbare council services, potentially jeopardizing the council's viability.
Despite ministers' hopes that the settlement will 'turn the page on a decade of cuts', many councils are expected to continue struggling to meet soaring demand for services like social care and homelessness support. This indicates that more cuts are likely, reinforcing the sentiment that while the 'council cake' may be more fairly divided, it is not bigger. The local government finance settlement for 2026-27 is widely considered unlikely to stem the broader crisis in council budgets. A critical issue, the accumulated deficits on special educational needs services, forecast to reach £14bn by 2028 for English upper-tier councils, received little detailed attention in the announcement. Many councils are struggling to meet their legal duty to balance their books, with an increasing number expected to request Exceptional Financial Support (EFS) from the government to stave off effective bankruptcy. Last year, 30 councils received EFS, and speculation suggests up to 100 councils may apply in the coming months, highlighting that while the new settlement may offer some relief, it could push others closer to crisis.
Recommended Articles
Zambia's Bold IMF Shift: New Growth Focus Amidst Political Scrutiny!

Zambia has concluded its current IMF Extended Credit Facility and plans a new, comprehensive program focusing on growth ...
United Nigeria Airlines Soars: Joins Global Financial Network in Historic Milestone

United Nigeria Airlines has achieved a major milestone by gaining admission into the International Air Transport Associa...
You may also like...
Serrano Readies for Epic Title Defense Against Hanson at MVPW-03

Most Valuable Promotions is set to host MVPW-03 on May 30 in El Paso, Texas, featuring a blockbuster double main event. ...
Wirtz Ignites Debate: Liverpool's 'Giving Up' Against City Scrutinized by VVD

Liverpool midfielder Florian Wirtz has countered captain Virgil van Dijk's assertion that the team gave up in their rece...
'Dune 3' Tickets Sold Out 9 Months Before Release: Fan Hype Reaches Unprecedented Levels

The 2026 box office is experiencing a strong resurgence, highlighted by the highly anticipated December 18 showdown betw...
Marvel's X-Men Reboot Director Unveils Ambitious Plans and Comic Inspirations

Director Jake Schreier revealed that Marvel's X-Men reboot is drawing inspiration from the classic Chris Claremont era o...
Kruger National Park's Stunning Comeback: Renewed and Thriving After January Floods

Kruger National Park in May offers exceptional safari experiences, benefiting from ideal dry season conditions and the u...
Telecoms Under Siege: $12M Lost to Theft as Crime Surges 189%!

South Africa's telecom operators face a crisis as theft surges by 189% to $12 million in 2025, making it the dominant co...
Fintech Fortune: Lucky Secures $23M to Revolutionize North African Banking!

Egyptian consumer credit startup Lucky has secured $23 million in Series B funding to fuel its expansion across North Af...
Crypto Crime Wave: American Fraud Hits Staggering $11 Billion in 2025, FBI Warns!

The Indian SUV market sees compact SUVs leading sales in FY2025, with Tata Punch topping the charts. Maruti Brezza and F...