Understand exactly how your income is taxed, and discover how leveraging salary sacrifice schemes can significantly boost your overall compensation value.
Under a salary sacrifice arrangement, you formally agree to give up part of your taxable gross salary. In return, your employer gives you a non-cash benefit (like pension contributions, an EV, or extra holidays).
Because your gross salary is officially lower, you pay less Income Tax and less National Insurance. This makes things significantly cheaper than paying with "after-tax" money. Furthermore, it is your adjusted net income that is assessed for any childcare benefits.
When your "Adjusted Net Income" crosses £100,000, two things happen simultaneously, creating a ruthless hidden tax trap:
By aggressively throwing income over £100k into a Salary Sacrifice Pension, you can drop your Adjusted Net Income back down to £99,999—restoring your childcare and saving yourself from the 60% tax trap.
The Break-Even Point: If you choose not to sacrifice back down to £100k, the sheer weight of the 60% tax trap combined with the total loss of childcare means you would need a pay rise to roughly £130,000 gross for one child or a staggering £152,500 gross for two children before you're better off again!
When you lease an EV via salary sacrifice, you save Income Tax and NI on the monthly cost. However, because you are given a company car, you must pay Benefit in Kind (BiK) tax.
Crucially, the government sets BiK tax for EVs incredibly low (currently ). This tiny BiK tax is vastly outweighed by your massive Income Tax/NI savings.
Pensions are incredibly tax-efficient. Contributions made via salary sacrifice save both Income Tax and National Insurance. However, there are limits to how much you can contribute tax-free:
The UK operates a progressive "marginal" tax system. This means you do not pay the highest tax rate on all of your income—you only pay it on the specific portion of your income that falls within that highest band.
| Band | Taxable Income Range | Tax Rate |
|---|
Scotland sets its own Income Tax bands. The Personal Allowance remains identical to the rest of the UK, but the thresholds and tax rates diverge significantly.
| Band | Taxable Income Range | Tax Rate |
|---|
Student loans operate like a graduate tax. You repay a fixed percentage (e.g., 9% for undergrad, 6% for postgrad) on anything you earn above your specific plan's threshold.
If you have multiple undergraduate plans (e.g., Plan 1
AND Plan 2), you don't pay 18%. You still only pay a maximum of 9% total. Your deductions start
at the lowest threshold (Plan 1), and once you cross the higher threshold (Plan 2), the 9% is
split between the two loan companies.
However, Postgraduate loans run
concurrently. If you have Plan 2 and a Postgrad loan, you will pay 9% + 6% =
15% total on income above the thresholds!