Welcome to Telegraph Money's long-running "winners and losers" Budget report, where you will be able to see at a glance which of the Chancellor's measures will make you richer and which will make you poorer.
We will be adding Rishi Sunak's announcements below as he makes them. However, this year many measures have been made public before Budget day; they are also included here.
Budget winners Short-haul fliers
Air passenger duty on domestic flights will be halved.
The lower-paid
The National Living Wage, also known as the minimum wage, will increase to £9.50 an hour from £8.91 – an increase of £1,000 a year for a full-time worker. Around 2.5 million people will benefit.
Public sector workers
The Chancellor will announce pay rises for around five million public sector workers, following the freeze in pay announced during the pandemic.
Drivers
A rise in fuel duty had been expected but there are signs that Mr Sunak will extend the annual freeze into its 12th year after prices at the pumps hit fresh highs over the weekend.
Drinkers
Mr Sunak is widely expected to cut some alcohol duties. He has been conducting a review of duties on different forms of alcohol. He and Boris Johnson are both expected to hold a photoshoot at a brewery today, feeding speculation that beer duty will be cut, possibly by one penny.
Benefit claimants
There has been increasing speculation that the Chancellor will reduce the effect of the withdrawal of temporary increases to Universal Credit during the pandemic by making changes to the "taper", which determines how much of the benefit is taken away as a claimant's other income rise.
Budget losers Long-haul fliers
A new rate of air passenger duty for journeys of more than 5,500 miles of £91 will be introduced.
Cladding victims
The Government confirmed that it would charge a 4pc levy on building developers' profits to fund cladding remediation, but there was no new money announced to protect leaseholders. The tax takes the building safety fund to £5.1bn, but this is still below estimates that fixing the problem could cost more then £15bn. This is before rising building costs have been accounted for.
Council tax payers
Council tax has risen every year for the past 10 years under the Conservatives and it is likely the Chancellor will allow town halls to increase local levies once again, this time by up to 5pc. This would push the annual council tax bill for the average band D property close to £2,000.