Tax

Marriage Allowance 2026/27 — Rates, Eligibility & How to Claim £252

Marriage Allowance rates and thresholds for 2026/27. How to transfer £1,260 of your Personal Allowance, save £252 per year, and backdate claims up to 4 years.

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.

Marriage Allowance lets one partner transfer part of their tax-free allowance to the other — saving up to £252 every year. Despite being available since 2015, over 2 million eligible couples still don’t claim. Here are the rates, rules, and how to apply for 2026/27.

Marriage Allowance Rates 2026/27

Detail Amount
Amount transferred £1,260 (10% of Personal Allowance)
Annual tax saving £252
Lower earner’s allowance after transfer £11,310
Higher earner’s allowance after transfer £13,830
Maximum backdated claim 4 years (up to £1,260 extra)

The saving is calculated as £1,260 × 20% (basic rate) = £252. Since the lower earner doesn’t use this portion of their allowance, no extra tax falls on them.

Marriage Allowance History

Tax year Transfer amount Annual saving Backdatable in 2026/27?
2026/27 £1,260 £252 Current year
2025/26 £1,260 £252 ✅ Yes
2024/25 £1,260 £252 ✅ Yes
2023/24 £1,260 £252 ✅ Yes
2022/23 £1,260 £252 ✅ Yes
2021/22 £1,260 £252 ❌ Too far back

Eligibility Checklist

Both of these must be true:

Requirement Detail
Relationship Married or in a civil partnership (unmarried couples cannot claim)
Lower earner’s income Below £12,570 (the Personal Allowance)
Higher earner’s income Between £12,571 and £50,270 (basic rate taxpayer)
Born on or after 6 April 1935 (older couples may qualify for Married Couple’s Allowance instead)

Who Typically Qualifies

Marriage Allowance works best for couples where one partner:

  • Is a stay-at-home parent with no income or income below £12,570
  • Works part-time and earns below the Personal Allowance
  • Is retired with only State Pension income (currently below £12,570)
  • Is a student with little or no earned income
  • Has taken a career break for caring responsibilities

The other partner must earn enough to pay basic-rate tax but not so much that they’re a higher-rate taxpayer (above £50,270).

Scottish Taxpayers

Marriage Allowance works slightly differently in Scotland because of the different tax bands. Scottish taxpayers can claim if the higher earner pays tax at the starter rate (19%), basic rate (20%), or intermediate rate (21%). The higher earner cannot claim if they pay the higher rate (42%), advanced rate (45%), or top rate (48%).

The saving for Scottish taxpayers is still £252, because the marriage allowance reduction is always calculated at 20% regardless of which Scottish band applies.

How to Claim Marriage Allowance

Online (Fastest)

  1. Go to gov.uk/marriage-allowance
  2. The lower earner needs to apply — not the higher earner
  3. You’ll need both partners’ National Insurance numbers
  4. HMRC will adjust tax codes automatically

The online application takes around 5 minutes. HMRC usually processes it within a few weeks.

By Phone

Call HMRC on 0300 200 3300 (Monday to Friday, 8am to 6pm). Have both National Insurance numbers ready.

Through Self Assessment

If either partner files a Self Assessment tax return, Marriage Allowance can be claimed on the return instead.

How Backdating Works

If you’ve been eligible but haven’t claimed, you can get a lump-sum backdated payment covering up to 4 previous tax years.

Maximum Backdated Amount (Claiming in 2026/27)

Tax year Saving Running total
2022/23 £252 £252
2023/24 £252 £504
2024/25 £252 £756
2025/26 £252 £1,008
2026/27 £252 £1,260

HMRC pays the backdated amount as a lump sum to the higher earner, while the current year’s saving is applied through their tax code.

When Marriage Allowance Doesn’t Save You Money

Marriage Allowance is not worth claiming if:

  • Both partners earn over £12,570 — neither has unused Personal Allowance to transfer
  • The higher earner pays higher-rate tax (over £50,270) — they’re not eligible
  • The higher earner earns under £12,570 — they don’t pay tax, so there’s nothing to save
  • You’re not married or in a civil partnership — cohabiting couples cannot claim

Marriage Allowance vs Married Couple’s Allowance

Feature Marriage Allowance Married Couple’s Allowance
Who qualifies Born after 5 April 1935 Born before 6 April 1935
Annual saving £252 £427–£1,108
How it works Transfers allowance Reduces tax bill directly
Can claim both? No — one or the other

If either partner was born before 6 April 1935, check whether Married Couple’s Allowance would save more.

What Happens When Circumstances Change

Event What happens
Partner starts earning over £12,570 Cancel the transfer — both get full Personal Allowance
Partner becomes higher-rate taxpayer Transfer can no longer be used — cancel it
Separation Marriage Allowance continues until end of tax year, then stops
Divorce HMRC cancels automatically from the next tax year
Death of lower earner Higher earner keeps allowance for the rest of the tax year
Death of higher earner Estate benefits from the extra allowance for that tax year

Marriage Allowance and Other Tax Reliefs

Marriage Allowance works alongside other tax-saving strategies:

Key Dates

Date Event
6 April 2026 2026/27 Marriage Allowance year starts
5 April 2027 Last day to apply for 2026/27
5 April 2027 Last day to backdate claims to 2022/23

Sources

  1. HMRC — Marriage Allowance