Tax

How Much Can I Earn Tax-Free in the UK? (2025/26 & 2026/27)

A quick-reference guide to the tax-free allowances available in the UK — including the Personal Allowance, trading allowance, savings allowance, dividend allowance, and more.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

Everyone in the UK gets several tax-free allowances. Here is every allowance you can use to earn income without paying tax.

The Short Answer

Most people can earn £12,570 per year tax-free from employment or self-employment. But there are additional allowances on top of this.

Complete Tax-Free Allowances — 2025/26 and 2026/27

Allowance Tax-free amount What it covers
Personal Allowance £12,570 per year Employment income, self-employment profits, pension income
Trading Allowance £1,000 per year Side income from self-employment or casual work
Property Allowance £1,000 per year Income from renting property (e.g. spare room via Airbnb)
Rent a Room Scheme £7,500 per year Income from letting a furnished room in your home
Personal Savings Allowance (basic rate) £1,000 per year Interest from savings accounts
Personal Savings Allowance (higher rate) £500 per year Interest from savings accounts
Personal Savings Allowance (additional rate) £0 No allowance — all interest taxed
Starting Rate for Savings Up to £5,000 If your non-savings income is below £12,570
Dividend Allowance £500 per year Dividends from shares or your own company
ISA Allowance £20,000 per year All returns within ISAs — interest, dividends, capital gains
Capital Gains Tax Annual Exempt Amount £3,000 per year Profits from selling assets (shares, property, crypto)
Marriage Allowance £1,260 transfer Transfer 10% of Personal Allowance to spouse/civil partner
Junior ISA £9,000 per year Savings and investments for under-18s — tax-free
Lifetime ISA £4,000 per year (within ISA allowance) 25% government bonus for house purchase or retirement
National Insurance threshold £12,570 per year No NI on earnings below this (employees)
Trivial benefits (employed) £50 per benefit Small non-cash benefits from your employer
Pension Annual Allowance £60,000 per year Tax relief on pension contributions

Income Tax Bands — 2025/26 and 2026/27

Band Rate Taxable income
Personal Allowance 0% £0–£12,570
Basic rate 20% £12,571–£50,270
Higher rate 40% £50,271–£125,140
Additional rate 45% Over £125,140

Scotland has different tax bands:

Band Rate Taxable income
Personal Allowance 0% £0–£12,570
Starter rate 19% £12,571–£14,876
Basic rate 20% £14,877–£26,561
Intermediate rate 21% £26,562–£43,662
Higher rate 42% £43,663–£75,000
Advanced rate 45% £75,001–£125,140
Top rate 48% Over £125,140

National Insurance Thresholds — 2025/26

Threshold Amount NI rate
Below Primary Threshold Under £12,570/year 0%
Primary Threshold to Upper Earnings Limit £12,571–£50,270/year 8% (employees)
Above Upper Earnings Limit Over £50,270/year 2% (employees)

Self-employed NI (Class 4):

Threshold NI rate
Below Lower Profits Limit (£12,570) 0%
£12,571–£50,270 6%
Over £50,270 2%

Common Scenarios — Tax-Free Income

Scenario Tax-free amount
Employee, no savings or investments £12,570
Employee with savings interest £12,570 + £1,000 savings allowance = £13,570
Employee with dividends £12,570 + £500 dividend allowance = £13,070
Employee with side hustle under £1,000 Employment income up to £12,570 tax-free + £1,000 trading allowance on top
Self-employed only income £12,570 (or £13,570 if income under £17,570 and uses starting rate for savings)
Renting out a spare room £7,500 Rent a Room + £12,570 Personal Allowance on other income
Student with a part-time job £12,570 — students get the full Personal Allowance
Pensioner (State Pension only) State Pension is taxable but if under £12,570, no tax to pay
ISA saving Any amount within £20,000/year ISA limit — all returns tax-free, no limit on total pot

The £100,000 Trap — Losing Your Personal Allowance

Income Personal Allowance Effective marginal rate
Up to £100,000 £12,570 40%
£100,001 £12,569.50 60%
£110,000 £7,570 60%
£120,000 £2,570 60%
£125,140 £0 40% (back to normal higher rate)
Over £125,140 £0 45%

Between £100,000 and £125,140, your effective marginal tax rate is 60% because you’re losing £1 of Personal Allowance for every £2 earned.

How to Avoid the £100,000 Trap

Strategy Effect
Pension contributions Reduce adjusted net income below £100,000
Salary sacrifice Same effect — reduces your taxable income
Gift Aid donations Extend your basic rate band and can reduce adjusted net income
Spreading income over tax years If possible, defer bonuses or income to a lower-earning year

Key Facts

Question Answer
When does the tax year start? 6 April
When does the tax year end? 5 April
Will the Personal Allowance increase? Frozen at £12,570 until at least April 2028
Is the State Pension taxable? Yes — but collected through reduced Personal Allowance on other income, not through a tax code on the pension itself
Do children pay tax? Yes, if they earn over £12,570 — they have the same Personal Allowance as adults
Is Universal Credit taxable? No — benefits are generally not taxable

Students and Young People — Tax-Free Earnings

Students have the same Personal Allowance as everyone else — there’s no special rate.

Situation Tax-free amount
Student with part-time job £12,570/year (same as adults)
Student working summer holidays £12,570/year (pro-rata applies)
Gap year worker £12,570/year
Apprentice £12,570/year
Paper round / babysitting (under £1,000) Often covered by trading allowance

Common Student Tax Mistakes

Mistake Solution
Emergency tax on first job Apply for tax refund via P50 or wait until tax year end
Multiple jobs not coded correctly Contact HMRC to split Personal Allowance
Not claiming refund after leaving Submit P85 if leaving UK or wait for automatic refund
Paying tax on bank interest PSA usually covers — claim back if overpaid

Side Hustle Tax Rules — The £1,000 Trading Allowance

If you have a side hustle alongside a main job, you get extra tax-free income.

Type of side income Allowance On top of Personal Allowance?
Selling on eBay/Vinted £1,000 Yes — separate allowance
Freelance work (Fiverr, Upwork) £1,000 Yes
Tutoring £1,000 Yes
Dog walking, cleaning £1,000 Yes
Delivering for Deliveroo/Uber £1,000 (if self-employed) Yes
Renting room via Airbnb £1,000 property allowance OR £7,500 Rent a Room Yes
Car boot sales (personal items) Usually not taxable N/A

When You Must Register with HMRC

Income level Action required
Under £1,000 No action needed — don’t even need to tell HMRC
£1,000–£12,570 (only income) Register as self-employed but no tax to pay
Over £1,000 (with employment) Register, complete Self Assessment, claim trading allowance OR deduct expenses

Pensioners — Tax-Free Income

Income source Tax treatment
State Pension Taxable — but uses your Personal Allowance
Private/workplace pension Taxable
Pension lump sum (25% of pot) Tax-free
ISA withdrawals Tax-free
Premium Bond prizes Tax-free
Savings interest (up to PSA) Tax-free
Pension Credit Not taxable
Attendance Allowance Not taxable

Example: Pensioner Tax Calculation

Income Amount
State Pension £11,502
Private pension £5,000
Total income £16,502
Less Personal Allowance £12,570
Taxable income £3,932
Tax at 20% £786.40

How Pensioners Can Reduce Tax

Strategy Effect
Transfer Marriage Allowance Save up to £252/year if spouse earning less
Use ISA allowance Future income tax-free
Gift excess income Reduces estate for IHT
Consider deferring State Pension Higher payments later

How to Check Your Tax-Free Allowance

Method Details
HMRC Personal Tax Account Shows your Personal Allowance and tax code
P60 (end of tax year) Shows total tax-free amount used
Payslip Tax code shows allowance (1257L = £12,570)
HMRC app Check your tax situation
Call HMRC 0300 200 3300

Sources

  1. HMRC — Income Tax