BILL BOOST

Cash-strapped couples could get up to £2,500 in bill boost this Friday

HARD-UP couples could get up to £2,500 under the emergency Budget coming this Friday.

The extra cash is a boost from Chancellor Kwasi Kwarteng in his effort to help those struggling with the cost of living.

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Millions could get an extra £2,500 under the emergency Budget this FridayCredit: Alamy

Millions will have their taxes cut next Friday as the cost of living continues to soar.

This "mini budget" is PM Liz Truss' plan to help hard-up families and households keep more money in their pockets.

According to the , up to two million low-income couples where one makes less than £12,570 per year could save up to £2,500 in tax.

Right now, we have the marriage tax allowance. This means married couples or those in civil partnerships can share their personal tax allowances.

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People can transfer 10% of their tax-free allowance to their partner, reducing the tax they pay by up to £252 a year.

Partner A earns £11,500 - not paying any tax. Partner B earns £20,000 and pays 20% tax on the £7,430 - the sum above the £12,570 threshold. 

Along with transfer allowances and tweaks, right now Partner B is taxed on a smaller sum and the combined saving is £214.

But Ms Truss wants to see the transfer of all personal tax allowances between married couples and civil partnerships where one partner earns below £12,570.

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So all of Partner A's £12,570 tax-free allowance is transferred.

The lower earner can "gift" £1,260 of allowance and save £214 in tax after the changes, says the Sunday Mirror.

The maximum tax saved between a couple would be £2,500.

But this would cost the Chancellor an extra £5.8billion - so he might wait until the full Budget later this year.

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Under the mini budget, Liz Truss will also give more details about the £150 billion energy bill bailout, with businesses waiting on tenterhooks for more information about how to access the much-needed support.

She is capping energy prices so the typical family will pay no more than £2,500 for their bills over the next two years.

Ms Truss has not yet axed the National Insurance rise of 1.25%, or the planned rise in corporation tax next year, although the Sunday Mirror believes Mr Kwarteng will.

This will stop corporation tax rising from 19% to 25%, which was a flagship promise from the PM's Tory leadership campaign to let Brits keep more of their cash.

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The PM is also said to be looking at other measures to ease the cost of living crisis and turbocharge the economy.

Last week, the government announced multi-billion package to save typical Brits £1,000 by protecting them from crippling global gas costs.

Bills were set to rise to £3,500 in October and more than £6,000 next April in a terrifying prospect for most households. 

However in a mammoth intervention - which could cost more than the furlough scheme - Ms Truss is now going to cap costs from October 1, with the typical family paying no more than £2,500.

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Kwasi Kwarteng is also set to unveil his "Big Bang 2.0" deregulation blitz at next Friday's mini-Budget.

Read more about the PM's planned mini budget here.

Brits in certain areas of the UK could have taxes slashed - read more here.

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