Deborah Crowley, 63, works 33 hours a week in an NHS admin role. She recently sold her house and now lives with her son Stuart in Sheffield.
She is pleased with some measures in the Budget, including the reduction in the tax-free amount people can pay into their workplace pension.
"There are many people, I believe, who can afford the extra tax," she says, adding "mansion taxes" on homes worth over £2m in England will help the NHS and local communities.
However, she is unhappy that the freeze on income tax thresholds was extended to 2031, as this means both she and her son will see a "back door tax increase" in that time.
Deborah is currently paid £20,000. Modelling from accountancy firm EY shows that if her pay rises in line with inflation, she would pay £871 more in income tax between 2028-29 and 2030-31 as a result of the threshold freeze being extended by three years.
She thinks instead of scrapping the two-child benefit cap, the chancellor should have introduced spending vouchers for larger families on universal credit.
