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What is NI and how much do workers and employers pay?

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Image source, Getty Images/BBC

The government has announced an increase in the amount of National Insurance (NI) paid by employers.

Before the Budget, the chancellor and prime minister had promised not to increase the main rates of income tax and National Insurance (NI) for working people and these will not change.

NI rates paid by workers and the self-employed have already been been cut in 2024, but previous changes to the way tax is calculated mean the amount many people pay overall has risen.

What is National Insurance and what does it pay for?

The government uses National Insurance contributions (NICs) to pay for benefits and to help fund the NHS.

It is paid by employees, employers and the self-employed across the UK. Those over the state pension age do not pay it, even if they are working.

Eligibility for some benefits, including the state pension, depends on the NICs you make across your working life., external

How much do employers pay in National Insurance?

At the moment businesses pay a rate of 13.8% on employees’ earnings above a threshold of £9,100 a year.

In the Budget Chancellor Rachel Reeves said this rate would increase to 15% in April 2025, and the threshold would be reduced to £5,000.

The employment allowance – which allows companies to reduce their NI liability – will increase from £5,000 to £10,500.

In total Reeves said the changes would raise £25bn a year by the end of the period covered by the Budget.

Neither employers nor employees pay NI on pension contributions. There had been widespread speculation that the Budget could set out plans for employers to start doing so, but it did not.

How much do employees pay in National Insurance?

Workers start paying NI when they turn 16 and earn more than £242 a week, or have self-employed profits of more than £12,570 a year.

The starting rate for National Insurance for 27 million employees fell twice in 2024: from 12% to 10%, and then again to 8%.

The previous Conservative government said that the two cuts were worth about £900 a year for a worker earning £35,000.

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For the self-employed, Class 4 NI contributions on all earnings between £12,570 and £50,270 fell from 9% to 6%.

At the time, the previous government said this was worth £350 to a self-employed person earning £28,200.

Self-employed workers also no longer have to pay a separate category of NI called Class 2 contributions.

The NI rate on income and profits above £50,270 remains at 2% for all workers.

What are the current income tax rates?

Income tax is paid on earnings from employment and profits from self-employment during the tax year, which runs from 6 April to 5 April the following year.

It is also paid on some benefits, external and pensions, income from renting out property, and returns from savings, external and investments, external above certain limits.

The basic rate is 20% and is paid on annual earnings between £12,571 and £50,270.

The higher rate is 40%, and is paid on earnings between £50,271 and £125,140.

Once you earn more than £100,000, you also start losing the £12,570 tax-free personal allowance.

You lose £1 of your personal allowance for every £2 that your income goes above £100,000.

Anyone earning more than £125,140 a year no longer has any tax-free personal allowance.

The additional rate of income tax of 45% is paid on all earnings above £125,140 a year.

These rates apply in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Some income tax rates are different, external in Scotland, where a new 45% band took effect in April 2024. At the same time the top rate also rose from 47% to 48%.

What is happening to NI and income tax thresholds and why do they matter?

Despite the NI cuts for workers and the self-employed in 2024, millions will still pay more tax overall because of changes to the tax thresholds.

These are the income levels at which people start paying NI or income tax, or have to pay higher rates.

These used to rise every year in line with inflation.

However, the previous government froze the NI threshold and tax-free personal allowance at £12,570 until 2028. Higher-rate tax will continue to kick in for earnings above £50,270.

Freezing the thresholds means that more people start paying tax and NI as their wages increase, and more people pay higher rates.

According to the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think thank, the freeze cancels out the benefits of the NI cuts for some workers.

In the 2024-25 tax year, it says an average earner will have a tax cut of about £340 – from the combined tax changes – and people earning between £26,000 and £60,000 will be better off.

But by 2027, the average earner would be only £140 better off – and only people earning between £32,000 and £55,000 a year would still benefit.

Before the Budget there had been speculation that the chancellor would extend the freeze until 2030 but she said she had decided not to do so.

Who pays most in income tax?

For most families, income tax is the single biggest tax they pay.

But for less well-off households, a greater share of family income goes on taxes on spending, known as indirect taxes.

For the poorest fifth of households, VAT is the biggest single tax paid.

Bar chart showing how much of families' incomes goes on income tax, NI, council tax, VAT and duties. The chart shows this split for the poorest fifth of households up to the richest fifth.

How do UK taxes compare with other countries like France and Germany?

You can look at the amount of tax raised as a proportion of the size of the economy, or GDP.

In 2022 – the most recent year for which international comparisons can be made – that figure was 35.3%.

That puts the UK right in the middle of the G7 group of big economies.

Bar chart showing tax revenue as a percentage of GDP. The United Kingdom's tax burden is relatively low compared to other advanced economies, with a value of 35.3% in 2022.

France, Italy and Germany tax more; Canada, Japan and the US tax less.

However, overall taxation in the UK is high compared with historical rates.

In its assessment of the 2024 March Budget, the OBR said the government would collect 37.1p of every pound generated in the economy in 2028-29.

That would be the highest level in 80 years.

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