UK Economy Expected to Cool in 2026 as Weak Consumer Sentiment Impacts Spending, Report Reveals

The UK economy is set to slow to around 1.0% in the coming year, down a bit from 1.4% in 2025, as a combination of a “softening labour market and subdued consumer confidence” constrain household spending, according to KPMG UK’s Economic Outlook.

As noted in the update from KPMG, unemployment is forecast to rise to “5.2% in 2026, reflecting slower hiring, increasing participation and automation-driven restructuring.”

Wage growth is expected to slow, falling towards “3% by mid-2026, limiting household consumption alongside continued fiscal drag.”

Household spending is also set to be impacted “by the tax measures announced in the Autumn Budget.”

The largest tax measure announced was the freezing of income and National Insurance Contribution (NIC) tax thresholds for “three years to 2030/31 and under current plans, these would bring an additional 4.8 million people into paying the higher rate of tax and 600,000 more onto the additional rate.”

Yael Selfin, Chief Economist at KPMG UK, said:

“The outlook for growth in 2026 is subdued, reflecting the impact of a cooling labour market and weak household spending. But there are pockets of strength emerging in the form of data infrastructure and green energy investment. The medium-term picture could improve further if planning reforms unlock housing delivery and uncertainty reduces for investors.”

They added:

“With ongoing headwinds continuing to weigh on household activity, consumer spending is likely to remain subdued over the coming year. Although the Autumn Budget avoided front-loaded tax hikes, the decision to maintain frozen tax thresholds until 2031 means that fiscal drag will persist.”

Although UK business investment has underperformed international peers since 2016, recent growth has been driven “by two areas, the energy sector and information and communication, supported by renewable capacity expansion and demand for AI-enabled data infrastructure.”

Investment outside these sectors remains subdued, “raising the risk of a K-shaped recovery in which gains remain concentrated rather than economy-wide.”

But policy reforms to planning, energy systems and skills “could broaden the investment uplift.”

GDP growth is forecast to improve to “1.4% in 2027 as investment momentum strengthens, public infrastructure projects scale up and planning reform begins to feed into housing supply.”

External demand is expected to offer limited support to the UK economy in 2026, “with a slowing US economy and higher tariffs weighing on exports, while trade diversions boost imports, leaving net trade broadly flat.”

A more benign inflation outlook and greater fiscal clarity “will strengthen the case for continued monetary easing.”

The Bank of England is expected to cut rates once more in Dec 2025, to 3.75%, before slowing the pace of “reductions in 2026 where they are likely to settle at 3.25%.”

But UK borrowing costs are expected to remain high relative “to other advanced economies unless fiscal credibility is strengthened and long-term spending pressures addressed.”

Headline inflation is forecast to continue easing “over the coming year, helped by the measures in the Autumn Budget, which will see household energy bills fall from Apr 2026, alongside, improving global food trends and softer domestic demand.”

Inflation is now reportedly expected to return to the Bank’s “2% target by Spring 2026, although persistent wage pressures mean core inflation is likely to fall more slowly”.



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