
The BCC has used the data to create a business manifesto for the EU Reset as the urgency of real-world change continues to ratchet up.
It identifies an increasing number of challenges as regulations continue to diverge, making it more and more difficult for traders to adapt on both sides of the Channel.
The Trade and Co-operation Agreement (TCA) was agreed on Christmas Eve in 2020 to allow tariff-free trade with the EU once Brexit took effect.
But services access has been limited by rules on business mobility and only 16% of exporters think the deal is helping them to grow sales in Europe, with 54% disagreeing.
Emerging issues like de minimis exemptions for low value parcels are also creating waves as the EU and UK work out their reactions to changes pushed by the US.
The EU is now removing its exemption in 2026, but the UK will not follow suit until as late as 2029. This risks harming the competitiveness of British firms exporting to the EU alongside trade diversion from Chinese companies into the UK.
The one bright spot is that awareness of upcoming changes in trade rules and regulations has improved significantly compared to last year. In 2024, more than three quarters of firms knew no details of much of the legislation.
But as the onslaught of changes has caused firms increasing cost and bureaucracy, more have kept on top of new legislation. Only 11% did not know about planned changes on steel tariffs, while just a third (36%) were unaware of EU customs and VAT rule changes.
The BCC has sent its EU reset report to Government, providing recommended solutions to many of the problems.
“We are an education services provider. The barriers to trade due to limits on freedom of movement between the EU and UK have caused problems for both staffing and recruitment of clients.” ~ Medium-sized education firm in the West Midlands
“Since Brexit our export sales have virtually stopped. The TCA has had no impact in recovering any sales into the EU” ~ Small manufacturing firm in Greater Manchester
“The current Brexit related constraints have brought significant extra costs in importing goods from the EU. They have also limited our range – as many smaller EU suppliers do not wish to trade with the UK, due to the admin fees and complications.” ~ Small retail firm in Hampshire
“Work has stopped coming to UK due to high taxes and no longer being part of the EU. As a result, lots of companies have shut down and thousands of people have lost their jobs and been out of work for over 2 years.” ~ Small entertainment firm in London
“With a Budget that failed to deliver meaningful growth or trade support, getting the EU reset right is now a strategic necessity, not a political choice. Trade is the fastest route to growth, yet firms tell us it is becoming harder, not easier, to sell into our largest market.
“This year’s reset was presented as a turning point, and wins like rejoining Erasmus+ help, but businesses need much more. They want clarity, certainty and delivery at pace in 2026, and an understanding of the government’s vision that stretches far beyond.
“Businesses do not want a future with the EU where they constantly have to manage friction and are beset with recurring crises. They want a mature, stable relationship that underpins trade, investment and security.
“That means agreeing deals on food checks, emissions trading and electricity, restarting defence cooperation, and finding a pragmatic path on youth mobility. But it also means committing to a framework that builds deeper cooperation, provides better regulatory dialogue and leads to fewer shocks.
“Without that strategic horizon, trade issues will keep piling up at the UK’s door, but with it, businesses on both sides of the Channel can plan, invest and drive growth.”
Its top five proposals for discussions in 2026 are:
Read more latest news from the BCC here.
23.12.2025