The Office for National Statistics reports the strongest monthly surplus since 1993, driven by higher self-assessment tax receipts and improving fiscal borrowing trends.
The UK’s public sector finances delivered a remarkable performance in January 2026, according to the Office for National Statistics. Initial estimates reveal a £30.4 billion surplus for the month—more than double the £15.2 billion recorded in January 2025 and substantially ahead of forecasters’ expectations.
This surplus represents the highest monthly figure recorded since the ONS began tracking public sector finances in 1993, adjusted for normal inflation patterns. The Office for Budget Responsibility had forecast a surplus of £24.1 billion for January in its November 2025 outlook, making this result £6.3 billion better than anticipated.
Understanding the January BoostThe outsized January performance reflects a predictable but significant pattern in the UK’s fiscal calendar. Every January sees substantially higher tax revenues because self-assessed income tax and capital gains tax payments concentrate in this month. The ONS reported that combined self-assessed Income and Capital Gains Tax receipts reached £46.4 billion in January 2026—approximately £10.5 billion more than the equivalent month in 2025.
This is not unusual; January always produces stronger figures than other months due to the structure of self-assessment deadlines. However, the scale of the increase signals that self-employed workers, business owners and investors have performed better than in the previous year, generating higher tax liabilities.
Borrowing Trends Show ImprovementBeyond the single-month surplus, the underlying fiscal picture shows sustained improvement. Borrowing across the financial year running from April 2025 to January 2026 totalled £112.1 billion—representing an 11.5 per cent reduction compared to the same ten-month period in the previous financial year. This equates to £14.6 billion less borrowing than twelve months earlier.
Nevertheless, the ONS notes this remains the fifth-highest April-to-January borrowing figure on record when measured without inflation adjustment. The Office for Budget Responsibility had anticipated borrowing of £120.4 billion for this period, so actual borrowing came in £8.3 billion lower.
Current Spending versus Capital InvestmentA key distinction in government finances exists between the current budget—spending on day-to-day operations—and capital investment in infrastructure and assets. The current budget, which funds activities such as public sector wages, welfare payments and NHS running costs, recorded a surplus of £40.9 billion in January alone.
For the broader financial year to January 2026, the current budget deficit stands at £55.9 billion. This represents a £18 billion improvement (24.3 per cent reduction) compared with the equivalent period last year. The narrowing of the current budget deficit suggests the government is getting closer to funding its everyday activities from current tax revenues rather than borrowing.
Debt Levels and Market ContextThe Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales reports that public sector net debt reached a provisional £2,867 billion as of 31 January 2026. Whilst this headline figure appears large, it reflects the accumulated borrowing decisions of successive governments across decades, including substantial support measures during the pandemic and subsequent economic challenges.
The public sector net cash requirement—the additional cash the government needs to raise from financial markets to finance its activities—posted a surplus of £39.8 billion in January 2026, a substantial £24.6 billion improvement on January 2025.
Caveats and Wider ContextEconomists and analysts caution against reading too much into January’s exceptional performance. The Institute for Fiscal Studies highlighted that whilst borrowing is falling faster than previously expected, January’s figures remain heavily influenced by the annual concentration of self-assessment receipts. Year-on-year comparisons can also be affected by timing differences and one-off factors.
The ONS made technical revisions to its previous estimates, adjusting downward its figures for central government tax receipts and National Insurance contributions by £600 million, whilst increasing estimated spending on goods and services by £400 million and current grants by £500 million.
What This Means for Kent ResidentsFor Kent households and businesses, these improving fiscal figures offer some positive signals about the government’s room for manoeuvre. Better-than-expected borrowing performance could theoretically provide flexibility for fiscal decisions affecting disposable incomes, public services or business support—though such decisions remain political choices rather than automatic consequences of stronger figures.
Kent’s cross-Channel trade via Dover and Folkestone ports, plus its resident population of self-employed professionals and small business owners, means local prosperity is closely linked to business profitability and employment strength. The strong self-assessment receipts signal that Kent-based entrepreneurs and investors have maintained reasonable financial health, though broader economic pressures on households and businesses remain in place. More predictable public finances may also support continued investment in Kent’s transport infrastructure, including HS1 operations and local services, as government departments have greater budget certainty.
Source: @ONS


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