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.
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 |
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