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20 March, 2026
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Home Brighton

Council tax rise approved

Bills to go up from April – find out by how much

by Frank le Duc
Thursday 22 Feb, 2024 at 10:01PM
A A
25
Residents inundated with dozens of council tax emails

Brighton and Hove City Council has voted to put up council tax bills by 4.99 per cent from April.

The Brighton and Hove element of the average band D council tax bill will rise by £94.03 from £1,883.63 to £1,977.66.

The full amount for the average band D council tax bill for the Brighton and Hove area for 2024-25 will also include precepts from the Sussex police and crime commissioner and the East Sussex Fire Authority which have not yet been set.

The police and crime commissioner precept is to go up by £13 for a band D property – from £239.91 to £252.91.

And the East Sussex Fire Authority precept is rising by £3.12 or 2.99 per cent for a band D property – from £104.37 to £107.49.

In the current financial year, overall band D bills in Brighton and Hove were £2,227.91 – up £109.60 from £2,118.31. This was the equivalent of £185.66 a month or £42.84 a week.

From April, overall band D bills will go up £110.15 from £2,227.91 to £2,338.06 – or almost £194.84 a month or £44.96 a week.

And people in a few areas of Brighton, such as those in the Rottingdean parish, will receive a slightly higher bill.

Council tax funds about a fifth of overall council spending, with the rest coming from grants, business rates, fees, charges, commercial rents and other income streams.

The council tax rise was voted through as the council passed a £1.1 billion budget for the coming financial year.

Much of the government grant funding is ring-fenced, such as the dedicated schools grant.

In the coming weeks, members of policy committees will go through the capital spending programme, learning exactly which big projects will be funded in the year ahead.

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Comments 25

  1. John Coleman says:
    2 years ago

    Pensioners robbed again. Pension rises should at least match rate rises. If not, where do they think pensioners are going to magic up the extra?
    All pensioners make a will asap if not already done so. Stop grasping govt snatching all your hard won and already taxed cash. If no family, leave it local charities.

    Reply
    • Pedestrianise Seven Dials says:
      2 years ago

      The state pension is going up 8.5% in April, a far higher percentage than the 4.99% rise in council tax and higher than what nearly all of the working population will get.

      Reply
      • Han Wachtel says:
        2 years ago

        So, once one factors in the freeze on Personal Allowance and therefore any increase that sees anyone past the PA threshold (£12570) will lose a certain amount of any rise in additional tax, the amount received by any individual has already shrunk. Thus, a 4.99% increase to an already excessive amount will impact (as ever) the most vulnerable.

        Reply
      • Eddie Barham says:
        2 years ago

        Not at all. 8.5% out of £100. CT 5% out of £1,000. Working population 10% out of £500 per week. Have you done your maths lesson now ?

        Reply
        • Pedestrianise Seven Dials says:
          2 years ago

          If you want to ignore percentages and look at pound increase. The annual state pension is increasing by £902.20, a band D property (oh how nice it would be to afford one) is going up by £110.15 for the year as per this article. So the state pension increase easily covers that.

          The pound increase the average worker will get is hard to put a number on – so instead to share a bit of my own situation, as a full-time worker myself I’m predicting about a £1200 annual increase (far from 8.5%), but then I work full-time and enjoy all the tax and tuition fee repayments that come with that meaning it’s all taxed at 39% and I’ve had a £400 per month increase in mortgage repayments to enjoy also.

          Would you like me to teach you that maths lesson?

          That said, the whole system of local authority funding and council tax needs to be overhauled.

          Reply
  2. Chris says:
    2 years ago

    Too many people too few working too much spent on COVID no cash in the bank. We are all suffering to some level

    Reply
  3. Dan says:
    2 years ago

    What is it spent on ? Theres no police around ,no cctv in town the roads and pavements are all broken graffiti is everywhere no public toilets the list goes on ….

    Reply
  4. Boudicca says:
    2 years ago

    Don’t worry the council still have money to do endless pointless improvements that nobody wants ripping out perfectly good working doors and windows for inferior products. At the same time ignoring people’s pleas who are desperate for genuine improvements. Endless money for so called improvements to council properties needing constant access to homes to constantly disturb seriously ill people forcing them to live in building sites for weeks on end. Spending endless money to send threatening letters to some people who have just months to live. We not focus the cash on repairs that actually need it and the people who can give access.

    Reply
  5. Mike Beasley says:
    2 years ago

    Why are they continuing with VG3?
    £6million cost to local taxpayer.
    Increased pollution / congestion.
    Council’s own consultants advised against it
    Can cllr Muten please explain his rationale for this?

    Reply
  6. Barry Johnson says:
    2 years ago

    For what? In order to charge for something or justify a cost increase an organisation has to provide the full goods and services it is charging for, so it is unacceptable to be cutting them having ramped up the council tax. Even the council is not exempt from the Consumer Act 2015.

    Reply
    • Bob Roberts says:
      2 years ago

      They absolutely are, Barry. Consumer rights act doesn’t apply to council tax in any way shape or form. Hope that helps!

      Reply
      • Barry Johnson says:
        2 years ago

        It applies to all organsiations or businesses which take money from us in return for goods and services, thereby making us a ‘customer’

        Reply
        • ChrisC says:
          2 years ago

          Where your court case against the Council then Barry?

          Reply
  7. Gingerrogers says:
    2 years ago

    More Money for councillors allowances

    Reply
    • ChrisC says:
      2 years ago

      100% wrong.

      They are set by an independent committee with no councillors on it.

      That committee has not recommended any increases for this year.

      Reply
  8. Dan says:
    2 years ago

    The i360 running at a continuous loss costing the tax payer more each year hows that right ?

    Reply
  9. Miles Monty says:
    2 years ago

    I realise now that all those years ago when I began my life, I should have listened to my mother’s advice:

    Forget ambition. Just get a job at the council, look out the window all day at the world going by, pretend to look like you are doing something by pushing some paper around, and just think of your gold-plated pension when you get to 50.

    I should have listened.

    Reply
    • Nige says:
      2 years ago

      Indeed. Should you harbour more ambition and can handle the hoop jumping and politics, a career in the civil service awaits

      Reply
  10. Al wills says:
    2 years ago

    Need to fund the woke enforcement, oh I mean police.

    Reply
    • Benjamin says:
      2 years ago

      Everyone bashes the police until they need them. Hypocrisy at its finest.

      Reply
    • ChrisC says:
      2 years ago

      The council isn’t responsible for the police service or its budget,

      The Police and Crime Commissioner sets the council tax for the police service and tells all councils in the area how much precept to charge.

      Reply
    • Derek says:
      2 years ago

      residents do that already, look at you council tax bill when you get it

      Reply
  11. John Donne says:
    2 years ago

    Above inflation tax rise. More to theft from New Labour.

    Reply
    • ChrisC says:
      2 years ago

      Look at councils across the country and you’ll Tory councils are also applying the maximum 4.99% rise

      Reply
  12. paula mcleod says:
    2 years ago

    my pension increace gives me a magnificent £11,ooo per annum. fortunately l can let a room, which i do. that means l am ok, as my bills come to 600 per month. so people who think an 8 % increace on a state pension is a lot, are wrong. pensions in this country seem to be less than rest of europe. l did work most of my life, and still do a little, now that l am 80, and a female. l am not complaining just pointing out a few facts, paula

    Reply

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