Call for Retail Rates Relief in Scotland


The MIA has joined with other business groups representing the retail industry in Scotland to ask the Scottish Government’s Finance Secretary, Shona Robison MSP to ensure retailers in Scotland are awarded rates relief for 2025-26.

It follows the decision unveiled in the UK Budget to award the retail, hospitality and leisure sectors in England a temporary and capped rates relief for the coming year.

The joint letter was submitted on Monday to the Finance Secretary and is detailed below. It has already been picked up by various media outlets as follows:

The Herald: This is a challenging time for retailers in Scotland

Daily Business: Robison urged to bank budget spending boost

The Grocer: SRC calls for business rates relief amid ‘spiralling’ statutory costs

The Scotsman: How Scottish Budget can stick up for Scotland, boost growth


Dear Finance Secretary,

Retail, hospitality and leisure sectors’ rates relief

We welcome the First Minister’s support for boosting economic growth and the pledge in his Programme for Government to create the right conditions for business investment.

Given this, we write jointly to encourage you in your Scottish Budget on 4 December to ensure that retailers in Scotland benefit from temporary business rates relief. We understand that Barnett Consequential monies have been forthcoming as a result of the decision of the UK Government on retail, hospitality and leisure relief in England.

This is a challenging time for retailers in Scotland. Retail sales have flatlined for the past five months, the growth in shopper footfall is meagre at best, yet statutory costs are spiralling. The latest example of the latter is the Chancellor’s decision to increase employer’s national insurance contributions. This will disproportionately impact retail as it is the country’s largest private sector employer and because retail employs large numbers of people in entry-level and part-time roles. The sheer scale of the tax hike and short timeframe for implementation has fundamentally changed the outlook, adding £190 million in extra costs onto Scotland’s retailers each year.

Providing rates relief would help smaller stores here in Scotland alleviate the UK Government’s tax hike as well as support our hard-pressed retail destinations. Such a decision would be warmly welcomed. It would also send a positive signal at a time when the UK administration has said it recognises the rates burden on retail is disproportionate and envisages introducing a permanent business rates reduction for the sector from Spring 2026 onwards.

Yours sincerely,

David Lonsdale, Director, Scottish Retail Consortium

James Barnes, Chairman, The Horticultural Trades Association

Lesley Cameron, Chief Executive, Scottish Bakers

Dr Pete Cheema OBE, Chief Executive, Scottish Grocers’ Federation

Andrew Goodacre, Chief Executive, British Independent Retailers Association

Meryl Halls, Managing Director, Booksellers Association of the UK & Ireland

Caroline Larissey, Chief Executive, National Hair & Beauty Federation (NHBF)

Shahid Razzaq, National President, The Federation of Independent Retailers

Anthony Short, Executive Director, Music Industries Association


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