|
| |
Employment income is charged to both income
tax (as 'general' income) and to Class 1 National
Insurance Contributions. Tax and NIC are normally paid
by the employer through the PAYE system, but an employee
whose tax is not fully paid should complete a tax return
and settle the liability as described on page 2.
If the tax underpaid is up to £2,000 and the 2007/08
tax return is submitted by 30 September 2008, or e-filed
by 30 December 2008 the underpayment can be settled through
PAYE for 2009/10 rather than being collected on 31 January
2009. |
| |
|
| Employers and employees both contribute. Employee
contributions are payable at 11.0% or 9.4% between
the primary threshold and the upper earnings limit, and
a charge of 1% applies to all pay above the upper
earnings limit. |
|
|
|
|
| LEL: lower earnings
limit |
£87 |
£377 |
£4,524 |
| PT: primary threshold |
100 |
435 |
5,225 |
| UEL: upper earnings
limit |
670 |
2,903 |
34,840 |
|
No NIC are payable by employee or employer
on earnings up to the PT.
Earnings between the LEL and the PT must be reported by
the employer, and the employee receives credit towards
the State Pension, but no NIC are payable.
Rates of NIC on earnings above the PT depend on whether
the employee is within the State Second Pension (S2P),
or whether the employer has 'contracted out' using
a final salary (FS) or money purchase (MP) scheme. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| PT - UEL |
11.0 % |
9.4% |
12.8% |
9.1% |
11.4% |
| Above UEL |
1.0 % |
1.0% |
12.8% |
12.8% |
12.8% |
|
Contracting-out employers receive a special
rebate on earnings between the LEL and the PT.
A person with more than one employment can defer the payment
of some employee NIC until after the end of the tax year,
when the total amount payable can be checked and limited
so the full 11% rate is only applied to income between
the PT and the UEL. |
| |
|
| Employee benefits are usually valued at a
'cash equivalent' and are then charged to income
tax on the employee and Class 1A NIC (at 12.8%) on
the employer. The cash equivalent is generally based on
the cost to the employer of providing the benefit, but
the following are charged according to a statutory formula. |
| Cars provided by the employer:
a percentage of the original list price of the car, depending
on the CO2 emissions rating of the car. |
|
|
| 15% of list price |
to 144g/km |
| 1% addition |
145, 150 etc. |
| max 35% benefit |
over 239g/km |
|
| For diesel cars add 3% (min. is 18%,
max. still 35%). There is no discount for the level
of business mileage or the age of the car, but deduct
employee contributions for private use. |
Fuel provided by the employer for private
use in a company car is charged without reduction for
contributions unless all private fuel is paid for by the
employee.
To calculate the taxable amount the percentage used to
calculate car benefit is applied to a standard figure
of £14,400. |
| Vans provided by the employer for an
employee's private use are charged at a flat rate
of £3,000. If fuel is provided as well, an additional
£500 is charged. If private use is restricted to
home-to-work travel, there is no tax charge. |
| Loans of money of over £5,000
are charged on the excess of the official rate (5%
since 5.4.02, subject to change) over any interest actually
paid by the employee to the employer. |
| Use of assets is charged at 20%
of the original cost of the assets to the employer, or
the value when first made available to the employee, less
any amount paid by the employee for private use. |
|
Many employee benefits are not charged to
tax. A full list cannot be given here, but some of the
principal ones are: * providing one mobile
phone, even with private use. * subsidised
meals available to all employees in a staff restaurant
or canteen; * the provision of 'green
transport' such as works buses or the use of a bicycle
for commuting. |
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
| 1400cc or less |
9p |
9p |
6p |
| 1401cc - 2000cc |
11p |
9p |
7p |
| over 2000cc |
16p |
12p |
10p |
|
| |
|
* mileage allowances of up to 24p per
mile for business use of the employee's motorcycle
or 20p per mile for a pedal cycle * contributions
to approved pension schemes * payments of
up to £5 a night when staying away for 'personal
incidental expenses' (£10 if abroad). |
| |
|
Generally, employees are charged to income
tax on the value of shares that they are given or issued
by their employer, less any amount paid for the shares.
This applies to 'free shares' and to shares acquired
under option schemes. NIC is also charged if the company
is quoted, as the shares can be easily sold.
If the employer operates one of these 'Revenue-approved'
share schemes, the tax charge may be eliminated, reduced
or deferred. |
Share incentive plans (SIP) *
'free shares' to £3,000pa * 'partnership
shares' (employee buys with pre-tax salary) max £1,500pa,
employer can 'match' with up to 2 more for each
one purchased. * shares left in the scheme for
at least 5 years: no income tax or CGT on the value
when they leave the scheme. |
| Enterprise management incentives -
small trading companies can grant options to buy up to
£100,000 worth of shares to selected employees. |
| Company share option plans - share
options to buy up to £30,000 of shares can be granted
to employees. |
Approved savings-related share option plans
- employees contribute to a Save As You Earn plan (max.
£250 a month) to save the money needed to exercise
options.
With approved option schemes, the employee pays CGT on
sale of the shares rather than income tax/NIC on exercising
the options. The CGT charge is likely to be smaller and
later than the IT/NIC. |