- As part of our long-term plan to grow the economy, we are
cutting the main rates of National Insurance for employees and
the self-employed, and simplifying the tax system by abolishing
Class 2 NICs.
- Together, this is a tax cut for 29 million working people
worth £9 billion per year.
- In 2024-25, this is a tax cut worth £450 for the average
employee on £35,400 and means they will pay over 15% less NICs.
- Today’s changes mean that for those on average salaries,
personal taxes would be lower in the UK than every other G7
country, based on the most recent OECD data.
Cutting National Insurance for
employees
- We are incentivising work and making sure it pays by cutting
the main rate of Employee National Insurance (Class 1 NICs) by 2p
from 12% to 10%, from 6 January 2024, for 27 million workers.
- This action will reward work by reducing the current 32%
combined tax rate for employees (income tax + national insurance)
paying the basic rate of tax to 30% - the lowest since the 1980s.
- Thanks to today’s NICs cut and to above-inflation increases
to personal tax thresholds since 2010, an average worker in
2024-25 will pay over £1,000 less in personal taxes than they
otherwise would have done.
- From April 2024, a full-time National Living Wage worker’s
take home pay will be 30% greater in real terms than it was in
2010, due to successive increases in the National Living Wage and
changes to personal tax rates and thresholds].
Who does this help?[1]
- A senior nurse with 5 years of experience on £42,618 will
receive an annual gain of £600.[2]
- An average full-time nurse on £38,900 will receive an annual
gain of over £520.[3]
- An average police officer on £44,300 will receive an annual
gain of over £630.[4]
- A typical junior doctor on £63,000 will receive an annual
gain of over £750.[5]
- A cleaner working night shifts on £21,000 will receive a gain
of £170.[6]
- A typical self-employed plumber on £34,400 will receive an
annual gain of £410.[7]
- An average teacher on £44,300 will receive an annual gain of
over £630.[8]
- A hard-working family with 2 earners on the average earnings
of £35,404 will be £900 better off.
Cutting National Insurance for the
self-employed
- We are cutting the main rate of Self-employed National
Insurance (Class 4 NICs) by 1p from 9% to 8% from April 2024, for
around 2 million people. This takes effect on 6 April 2024.
- This is worth £350 for the average self-employed person on
£28,200.
- From 6 April 2024, self-employed people with profits above
£12,570 will no longer be required to pay Class 2 NICs, but will
continue to receive access to contributory benefits including the
State Pension.
- This is a tax simplification that effectively abolishes Class
2 NICs by removing the requirement for self-employed people to
pay.
- Those with profits between £6,725 and £12,570 will continue
to get access to contributory benefits including the State
Pension through a National Insurance credit without paying NICs,
as they do currently.
- Those with profits under £6,725 and others who pay Class 2
NICs voluntarily to get access to contributory benefits including
the State Pension, will continue to be able to do so. The weekly
rate they pay will be frozen at £3.45 for 2024-25, rather than
rising by CPI to £3.70.
- The Small Profits Threshold - the point at which the
self-employed start to receive National Insurance credits - has
been frozen at £6,725, in line with last year’s approach. This
supports low income working individuals by maintaining their
access to contributory benefits, without having to pay NICs.
Further background on the 2p cut to employee
NICs
- The main rate of Employee NICs will be 10% from 6 January
2024.
- Employees will benefit from January, as their employers make
changes to their payroll system.
- There may be a minority of employers who do not amend their
payroll system in time for employees to see the benefit in their
January payslip. Employers will rectify this in subsequent months
and employees will receive the full value of the NICs cut.
- The Lower Earnings Limit – the point at which employees start
to receive NI credits - has been frozen at £6,396, in line with
last year’s approach. This supports low income working
individuals by maintaining their access to NICs credits, without
having to pay NICs.
- Individuals will continue to be able to pay voluntary Class 3
NICs to help fill gaps in their National Insurance record to
qualify for the State pension, exactly as before. The Class 3
rate will also be frozen at £17.45 per week for 2024-25.
Key National Insurance Rates and Thresholds from 6
April 2024
|
NICs Primary Threshold / Lower Profits
Limit
|
£12,570 (annual)
|
|
Class 1 NICs Main Rate (from 6 January
2024)
|
10%
|
|
Class 4 NICs Main Rate
|
8%
|
|
Lower Earnings Limit
|
£6,396 (annual)
|
|
Small Profits Threshold
|
£6,725 (annual)
|
|
Class 2 Rate (for those paying
voluntarily)
|
£3.45 (per week)
|
|
Class 3 Rate
|
£17.45 (per week)
|
[1] All case studies for
2024-25
[2] Based on a Band 6 nurse
with 5 years experience (source).
[3] Median gross annual pay
for a full-time nurse, Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2023
[4] Median gross annual pay,
Sergeant and below, Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2023
[5] Mean Annual Earnings
including additional activity for a Speciality Registrar
(source)
[6] Based on median gross
annual pay of £21,058 (mean is £21,560) for full-time cleaners
(“Elementary Cleaning Occupations: Cleaner and domestics”) in
ASHE 2023
[7] Median gross annual pay
for “Plumbers & heating and ventilating installers and
repairers” was £34,361 in ASHE 2023. The calculation assumes
self-employed profits equal to £34,361 (a C4 gain of £218) plus a
C2 gain of £192.
[8] Median earnings, School
Workforce 2022 plus announced 6.5% pay increase