Soft Drinks Industry Levy statistics commentary 2022
Updated 30 September 2022
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This publication is available at https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/soft-drinks-industry-levy-statistics/soft-drinks-industry-levy-statistics-commentary-2021
Released: 30 September 2022. Next Release: Autumn 2023.
Headline statistics
The latest headlines for Soft Drinks Industry Levy (SDIL) statistics are:
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total provisional SDIL receipts were £334 million for the financial year 2021 to 2022, compared to £299 million in the previous financial year (2020 to 2021) and £337 million in 2019 to 2020
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just over 96% of net liabilities were declared at the higher rate during the financial year 2021 to 2022, around the same level as the previous financial year, and a slight increase on the 95% in the financial year ending 2020
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provisional year-to-date receipts for the current financial year (April to August 2022) are £173 million
About this release
This annual Official Statistics publication provides Soft Drinks Industry Levy (SDIL) liabilities and volume declared at each rate, alongside receipts within the accompanying statistics tables.
SDIL traders declare liabilities on fixed quarterly reporting periods ending June, September, December and March, with payment due within 30 days following the period end date. Therefore, there is a one month lag between declared liabilities and receipts being received by HMRC.
Due to this and the timing of this publication we do not have complete liabilities and volumes data for September 2022 in this publication. Therefore the latest liabilities and volumes data is from the period ending August 2022 and this is provisional data.
SDIL was announced at Budget 2016, and introduced in April 2018 as a new levy applied to the packaging and importation into the UK of soft drinks containing added sugar.
Soft Drinks Industry Levy Net Liabilities
SDIL rates
There are 2 rates of SDIL:
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standard rate (18p per litre) applied to drinks with sugar content between 5 grams (g) and up to (but not including) 8g per 100ml
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higher rate (24p per litre) applied to drinks with sugar content equal to or greater than 8g per 100ml
Figure 1: Net liabilities declared at the end of each financial quarter for standard and higher rate SDIL over the previous 5 years.
The graph is plotted in quarters with Q1 referring to the first quarter of the financial year. Hence 2021 to 2022 Q1 refers to the months from April 2021 to June 2021.
For the full dataset that accompanies Chart 1 go to Soft Drinks Industry Level statistics tables 2022.
Chart 1 demonstrates several trends for SDIL liabilities declared:
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higher rate liabilities comprised, on average, around 96% of total net liabilities in each quarter since the 2018 to 2019 financial year.
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net liabilities are usually highest in the second quarter of the financial year, and then decrease to below £80 million in the fourth quarter
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net liabilities in the first quarter of the 2022 to 2023 financial year are the highest since the tax was introduced
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net liabilities were lowest in the first quarter of the 2020 to 2021 financial year, likely due to economic impacts related to the coronavirus pandemic
Soft Drinks Industry Levy Gross Liabilities and Credits
Liabilities must be declared on each Soft Drinks Industry Levy return for volumes by rate and whether they are packaged themselves or imported into the UK:
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gross liabilities refer to liabilities declared before any credit is claimed
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net liabilities refer to liabilities after any credit has been claimed (gross liabilities minus credit declared)
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credit can be claimed on SDIL returns for drinks that are exported, lost or destroyed
Figure 2: Gross liabilities declared as imported and packaged for the standard and higher rates over the previous 5 years.
The graph is plotted in quarters with Q1 referring to the first quarter of the financial year. Hence 2021 to 2022 Q1 refers to the months from April 2021 to June 2021.
For the full dataset that accompanies Chart 2 go to Soft Drinks Industry Level statistics tables 2022.
Chart 2 demonstrates several trends for SDIL liabilities declared:
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packaged liabilities make up around 87% of gross liabilities in each quarter
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gross liabilities are highest in the second quarter of the financial year, between £90 million and £110 million, and then decrease to below £90 million in the fourth quarter
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gross liabilities in the first quarter of the 2022 to 2023 financial year are the highest since the tax was introduced
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low liabilities in the first quarter of the 2020 to 2021 financial year, between April and June 2020, can be attributed to the coronavirus pandemic and UK-wide lockdown in response
Figure 3: Credit declared from exported drinks for the standard and higher rates 5 years.
The graph is plotted in quarters with Q1 referring to the first quarter of the financial year. Hence 2021 to 2022 Q1 refers to the months from April 2021 to June 2021.
For the full dataset that accompanies Chart 3 go to Soft Drinks Industry Level statistics tables 2022.
Chart 3 demonstrates several trends for SDIL credit declared:
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the higher rate makes up around 87% of exported credit declared in each quarter
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credit declared on exported drinks is highest in the first quarter of the 2019 to 2020 financial year, between April and June 2019, at around £15 million and is lowest in the first quarter of the 2020 to 2021 financial year, between April and June 2020, at around £9 million
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the value of credit declared on wastage is now included in the accompanying data tables as of the September 2022 publication, however the breakdown of wastage by rate type is not included.
Contacts
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