Saturday, April 4, 2026
NEWSLETTER
Construction Intelligence
No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Infrastructure
    • Housing
    • Safety & Wellbeing
    • Finance
    • People
    • Products
    • Architecture & Design
    • Environment
    • Awards
    • Plant & Machinery
No Result
View All Result
Construction Intelligence
No Result
View All Result

Autumn Budget 2025: Key Impacts on UK Construction

Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The UK’s 2025 Autumn Budget is set to reshape the operating landscape for construction and engineering businesses, with a package of fiscal and regulatory measures aimed at growth, productivity and regional investment. Law firm Burges Salmon has analysed the implications for contractors, consultants and asset owners across the built environment.

A central theme of the Budget is support for infrastructure delivery, with the government signalling continued backing for major transport, energy and social infrastructure programmes. For construction and engineering firms, this reinforces the pipeline of public-sector work, but also underlines the need to navigate evolving procurement rules, funding models and risk allocation on complex projects.

Tax policy is another area of focus, with changes designed to encourage capital investment and innovation. Adjustments to reliefs and allowances will be particularly relevant to contractors investing in plant, digital tools and modern methods of construction, as well as to engineering businesses undertaking research and development on new materials and low‑carbon technologies.

The Budget also touches on planning, housing and regional development, with measures intended to unlock sites and accelerate delivery in key growth areas. Construction and engineering companies will need to track how these national commitments translate into local authority decisions, funding allocations and conditions attached to planning consents.

Sustainability and net‑zero objectives continue to influence policy direction, affecting both new‑build and retrofit markets. Burges Salmon notes that firms should expect further alignment between fiscal incentives, regulatory standards and client expectations on carbon performance, resilience and whole‑life asset management.

Overall, the 2025 Autumn Budget reinforces the strategic importance of construction and engineering to the UK economy, while adding new layers of complexity to project planning and investment decisions. Burges Salmon’s commentary highlights the need for businesses to review their tax position, pipeline strategy and contractual risk profile in light of the announced measures.

Next Post

HS2 Dominates UK Rail Enhancement Spend in 2024/25

Recommended

£5bn HICL–TRIG infrastructure trust merger scrapped

Severfield faces strike action as pay dispute escalates

Popular News

  • Tustin Estate’s Next Chapter: Bouygues UK Signs Contract to Deliver 284 New Homes for Southwark Residents as Phase 2 Progresses

    Tustin Estate’s Next Chapter: Bouygues UK Signs Contract to Deliver 284 New Homes for Southwark Residents as Phase 2 Progresses

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Introducing Hartmere: The Hill Group reveals its latest Cambridge community

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Why One Triaxial Test Result Is Never Enough

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • ASWS wins contract at Glasshouse Street

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Three jailed over CSCS test fraud using Bluetooth earpieces

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Connect with us

Construction Intelligence

© 2025 Construction Intelligence

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

No Result
View All Result
  • Home

© 2025 Construction Intelligence