Income Tax UK: Tax Codes, Allowances, PAYE, Scottish Rates and Reliefs

Income Tax Guide UK 2026/27 — Bands, Rates & How It Works

Understand UK income tax with our comprehensive guide. Current tax bands and rates for 2026/27, personal allowance, National Insurance, and tax-saving tips.

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.

For a comprehensive overview of income tax, see our Income Tax guide.

Income Tax is the UK’s largest source of government revenue and the most significant tax most people pay. Whether you are employed, self-employed, or living off pension income, understanding how Income Tax works helps you keep more of your money — legally.

This guide covers the current rates and bands, how tax is collected, and practical ways to reduce your bill.

Income Tax Rates and Bands for 2026/27

Income Tax in England, Wales, and Northern Ireland is charged at the following rates:

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

These bands apply to taxable income — your total income minus your personal allowance and any tax reliefs.

Income Tax is calculated progressively. You pay each rate only on the portion of income that falls within that band — not on your entire salary. For instance, someone earning £60,000 pays 0% on the first £12,570, 20% on the next £37,700, and 40% on the remaining £9,730.

Personal Allowance Taper

If your income exceeds £100,000, your personal allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 earned above this threshold. This means the personal allowance is entirely eliminated once income reaches £125,140.

This creates a hidden 60% marginal tax rate between £100,000 and £125,140 — you pay 40% Income Tax plus effectively lose an extra 20% through the taper. Making pension contributions to bring your adjusted net income below £100,000 is one of the most widely used strategies to avoid this trap.

National Insurance

National Insurance Contributions (NICs) are charged alongside Income Tax and fund the state pension and certain benefits. For employees in 2026/27:

Class 1 NICs (Employee) Earnings Rate
Below the Primary Threshold Up to £12,570 0%
Between Primary Threshold and Upper Earnings Limit £12,570 to £50,270 8%
Above Upper Earnings Limit Over £50,270 2%

Employers also pay NICs at 13.8% on earnings above £5,000 (the Secondary Threshold), which is invisible on your payslip but increases the total cost of employment.

Self-employed individuals pay Class 4 NICs at 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% above £50,270.

Scottish Income Tax Rates

Scotland sets its own income tax rates and bands, which differ from the rest of the UK:

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

Scottish taxpayers pay more on higher earnings but slightly less at the starter-rate level. The same personal allowance of £12,570 applies throughout the UK.

Tax Codes Explained

Your tax code tells your employer how much tax-free income you are entitled to. The most common code is 1257L, which corresponds to the standard personal allowance of £12,570.

Other common codes include:

  • BR — All income taxed at the basic rate (used for a second job)
  • D0 — All income taxed at the higher rate
  • K — Indicates you owe tax from a previous year, so your allowance is reduced
  • SCottish codes — Prefixed with an S (e.g. S1257L)

If your tax code is wrong, you could be paying too much or too little tax. Check your code on your payslip and contact HMRC if it does not look right.

Marriage Allowance

If you are married or in a civil partnership, the lower earner can transfer £1,260 of their personal allowance to the higher earner — provided the higher earner is a basic-rate taxpayer. This saves up to £252 per year in Income Tax.

To qualify, the transferring partner must earn less than the personal allowance (£12,570), and the recipient must not be a higher or additional-rate taxpayer. You can backdate a claim for up to four years.

How Income Tax Is Collected

PAYE (Pay As You Earn)

Most employees have their Income Tax and NICs deducted automatically from their salary by their employer through the PAYE system. Your employer uses your tax code to calculate the correct deductions each pay period.

Self Assessment

If you are self-employed, have significant untaxed income, or earn above £150,000, you must file a Self Assessment tax return. The key deadlines are:

  • 5 October — Register for Self Assessment if it is your first time
  • 31 October — Paper tax return deadline
  • 31 January — Online tax return and payment deadline

Use our income percentile calculator to see where your earnings sit compared to the UK population.

Worked Examples — Tax at Different Salary Levels

£25,000 Salary

Portion Tax
First £12,570 (Personal Allowance) £0
£12,571–£25,000 at 20% £2,486
Income Tax £2,486

£40,000 Salary

Portion Tax
First £12,570 £0
£12,571–£40,000 at 20% £5,486
Income Tax £5,486

£60,000 Salary

Portion Tax
First £12,570 £0
£12,571–£50,270 at 20% £7,540
£50,271–£60,000 at 40% £3,892
Income Tax £11,432

£100,000 Salary

Portion Tax
First £12,570 £0
£12,571–£50,270 at 20% £7,540
£50,271–£100,000 at 40% £19,892
Income Tax £27,432

Special Rules for High Earners

The £100,000+ Personal Allowance Trap

When income exceeds £100,000, your Personal Allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 above £100,000. Between £100,000 and £125,140 the effective marginal rate is 60% because you’re paying 40% tax on extra income and losing 50p of allowance (taxed at 40%) per £1 earned.

Example — £110,000 salary: Income is £10,000 above the threshold. Allowance reduces by £5,000. That extra £5,000 of lost allowance costs £2,000 in additional tax (40% of £5,000) on top of the 40% already paid. Combined effective rate: 60%.

Solution: Pension contributions reduce your adjusted net income. Contributing £10,000 to a pension on a £110,000 salary restores the full £12,570 Personal Allowance.

High Income Child Benefit Charge

If either partner in a household earns over £60,000 and you receive Child Benefit, you must repay some or all of it:

Income Charge
Up to £60,000 No charge
£60,001–£80,000 1% of Child Benefit per £200 over £60k
Over £80,000 Full Child Benefit repaid

Two Jobs

If you have two jobs, each job has a separate PAYE calculation. Your main job usually gets the full Personal Allowance; the second job is typically coded 0T (taxed from the first pound). Check that HMRC has the allocation right — if your Personal Allowance is split across jobs you may underpay.

Benefits in Kind

Taxable benefits from your employer (company car, private medical insurance) appear on your P11D and HMRC uses them to adjust your tax code. Check your May/June P2 coding notice each year to ensure the values are correct.

Ways to Reduce Your Tax Bill

There are several legal strategies to lower your Income Tax:

Pension Contributions

Contributions to a workplace or personal pension receive Income Tax relief. Basic-rate taxpayers get 20% added automatically; higher-rate taxpayers can claim a further 20% through Self Assessment. Salary sacrifice pension arrangements also save on NICs for both employee and employer. See our pension tax relief guide for worked examples.

Salary Sacrifice

Some employers offer salary sacrifice schemes for pensions, cycle-to-work, childcare vouchers, or electric car leasing. You give up a portion of your salary in exchange for a non-cash benefit, reducing your taxable income and National Insurance liability.

Use Your ISA Allowance

While ISA contributions are made from after-tax income, all returns within an ISA are tax-free. This prevents interest and dividends from pushing you into a higher tax bracket or reducing your personal allowance.

Charitable Giving

Donations through Gift Aid allow the charity to reclaim 25% of your donation and higher-rate taxpayers can claim extra relief through Self Assessment. Giving through payroll giving is even more efficient as donations are taken before tax.

Trading and Property Allowances

You can earn up to £1,000 each from trading income (e.g. freelancing) and property income (e.g. renting a room under Rent a Room) tax-free under the trading and property allowances. These are separate from your personal allowance.

For more strategies to reduce tax on your investments, see our guide to Capital Gains Tax.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Income Tax
  2. HMRC — National Insurance