Popular now
Radisson opens Scandinavian-inspired hotel at Schiphol hub

Radisson opens Scandinavian-inspired hotel at Schiphol hub

Mason & Fifth to open fourth London site in Belsize Park

Mason & Fifth to open fourth London site in Belsize Park

Classic British Hotels adds Whittlebury Park to portfolio

Classic British Hotels adds Whittlebury Park to portfolio

Event Announcement

Connecting hoteliers through shared knowledge

Stay ahead of the hospitality curve at the Hotel Owner Conference 2026. Our 2026 sessions will tackle the industry's most pressing challenges: Hospitality Investment & Debt, the impact of AI and Personalisation, the roadmap to Net Zero, and Storytelling through Design. Meet the leaders defining the next era of UK hotel ownership.
Julie WhiteCCO, Accor Europe
Suzanne SpeakMD UK&I, Radisson
David HartCEO, RBH Hospitality
Varun ShettyGM, The Belfry
Christian MastersHotel Manager, art'otel
Julie WhiteCCO, Accor Europe
Suzanne SpeakMD UK&I, Radisson
David HartCEO, RBH Hospitality
Varun ShettyGM, The Belfry
Christian MastersHotel Manager, art'otel
3 November 2026  •  Prince Philip House, London
Get Tickets
Business rates revaluation postponed until 2022

Business rates revaluation postponed until 2022

In this episode we speak to Anthony Hunt, partner and co-head of Corporate Real Estate at law firm Howard Kennedy. We discuss why 2026 may be seen as a pivotal year for boutique hotels, unpack the rise of global nomadism and how this is shaping demand and trends across hospitality, and how a strong team and clear, consistent messaging and offerings are key to securing investment.

In association withand

Register to get 1 free article

Reveal the article below by registering for our email newsletter.

No spam Unsubscribe anytime

Want unlimited access? View Plans

Already have an account? Sign in

A revaluation of business rates will no longer take place in 2021 in line with the government’s latest efforts to “reduce uncertainty” for firms affected by the ongoing pandemic.

Communities Secretary Rt Hon Robert Jenrick MP confirmed that legislation has now been introduced to bring the next revaluation forward by one year from 2022 to 2021.

The announcement comes as ministers want to ensure businesses have “more certainty during this difficult time”.

Jenrick said: “We have listened to businesses and their concerns about the timing of the 2021 business rates revaluation and have acted to end that uncertainty by postponing the change.

“Now is the time for us to continue to focus on supporting businesses affected by the pandemic, including through our unprecedented package of almost £10bn in business rates relief.”

The government said it is continuing work on the fundamental review of business rates, with the “key aims” of reducing the overall burden on businesses, improving the current business rates system, and considering more fundamental changes in the medium-to-long term. The call for evidence for the review will be published in the coming months.

Alex Probyn, UK president of expert services at Altus Group, who’s firm led the call, said he was “delighted” that the government had listened to the concerns of businesses.

Probyn said: “This is great news. A revaluation next year, based upon open market rents in April 2019, a year before the pandemic, would have been so painful for UK businesses in the wake of such hardship, if the new tax demands were assessed from pre-Covid levels.

“It is far more beneficial economically to tie new rateable values under the next revaluation cycle to post Covid-19 levels, where the impact of the economic circumstances are more clear, and when businesses will have had longer to recover.”

The news comes as major UK banks received around 100,000 applications for the new ‘bounce back’ loan scheme on the first day of the loan went live to businesses.

The government-launched scheme offers loans up to £50,000, and is designed to cover loopholes that exist in the Coronavirus Business Interruption Loan Scheme (CBILS).

Previous Post

Coming back from coronavirus

Next Post

Ritz sold for half the market value amid family feud, court hears

Secret Link