Money Week

Mitigating the NI hike

If available, salary sacrifice could help decrease your taxable income

- David Prosser Business columnist

There is less than a week to go until national insurance contributi­ons increase, but there is still time to take action to mitigate the tax rise. In last week’s spring statement, chancellor of the exchequer Rishi Sunak refused to backtrack on his plans for a 1.25% increase in national insurance. But salary sacrifice schemes, offered by many employers, are a great way to reduce the impact of the increase, which comes into effect from 6 April.

In a salary sacrifice scheme, you give up some of your salary in return for your employer giving you a benefit of the same value. The most obvious example is a contributi­on to your pension plan, but some employers also offer benefits ranging from childcare support to the cycle-to-work scheme. In many cases, these benefits are not taxable. As a result, by entering into a salary sacrifice scheme, you are reducing the amount of income on which you will be taxed.

This is particular­ly valuable as national insurance contributi­ons go up. For someone earning £50,000 a year, the 1.25% national insurance increase will add around £200 to their annual bill for the 2022-2023 tax year. However, by using salary sacrifice to increase their pension contributi­ons by £100 a month, they could wipe out around £160 of that increase, without reducing the total value of their benefits at all.

Not all employers offer salary sacrifice and those that do may offer you the option of making pension contributi­ons in the traditiona­l way, rather than through this route. But where you have the option of joining a salary sacrifice arrangemen­t, the national insurance increase boosts the case for doing so.

There could also be an income-tax benefit. Before the spring statement, the chancellor had announced that incometax thresholds would be frozen until at least 2024. So as your salary rises each year, there is an increased chance of you moving into a new income-tax band and paying higher rates. Salary sacrifice schemes could mitigate this impact.

Do the sums before you commit

There are some reasons to tread carefully. Many employers offer staff free life insurance, but this is usually calculated as a multiple of your salary; by reducing that salary in a sacrifice scheme, you are therefore reducing the amount of life insurance you’re getting through work.

Another potential issue is reduced mortgage affordabil­ity. Lenders making calculatio­ns about how much they are prepared to lend you will typically take account of your salary, so by sacrificin­g some of it, you may be limiting the amount you can borrow. Also, you may need to check what salary sacrifice might mean for benefits such as statutory maternity pay, which is also calculated with reference to your salary.

Still, it is worth doing the sums. If your employer offers a salary sacrifice scheme, it will be able to give you a detailed breakdown of what joining will mean for your take-home pay and your tax bill. You can then make an informed decision about joining.

The good news is that employers have an incentive to offer these schemes. Their tax bills are rising too, since employers’ national insurance contributi­ons are also increasing on 6 April, so they’re looking for ways to save money. Some may even choose to share their national insurance savings with staff who join such schemes.

 ?? ?? Keep the chancellor’s hands off your wages
Keep the chancellor’s hands off your wages
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