How Income Tax works on your earnings, pensions and other income for 2026/27. Bands, PAYE codes, Self Assessment, the £100,000 taper and the reliefs that cut your bill — with worked examples and HMRC links.
Everything you need: the bands, how PAYE and tax codes work, the 60% trap, Self Assessment filing, and the reliefs that cut your bill — with worked examples and links to the exact HMRC tools and forms.
Income Tax is charged on your earnings from employment, self-employment, pensions, rental profit, and most other income. For the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027), you can earn up to £12,570 before paying any Income Tax — this is your Personal Allowance. Above that, England, Wales and Northern Ireland use three rates. The Personal Allowance and thresholds are frozen until April 2031, so as wages rise more income is dragged into higher bands — an effect known as fiscal drag.
| Band | Taxable income (2026/27) | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £0 – £12,570 | 0% |
| Basic rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% |
| Higher rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% |
| Additional rate | Over £125,140 | 45% |
Scotland sets its own rates on earned income — see our Scottish Income Tax guide. Savings and dividend income use UK rates everywhere.
National Insurance is charged separately on top — see our National Insurance guide. To model any salary precisely, use the Salary & Take-Home calculator.
Most employees pay through PAYE (Pay As You Earn): your employer deducts Income Tax and National Insurance each payday using the tax code HMRC issues. The standard 2026/27 code is 1257L, reflecting the full £12,570 allowance. Your code can change if you have benefits-in-kind (a company car, medical insurance), underpaid tax from an earlier year, more than one job, or untaxed income HMRC is collecting through your salary.
Find your code on your payslip, P60 or P45. Check it any time in your Personal Tax Account. If it looks wrong you can update it online or call HMRC — the wrong code means you over- or under-pay all year. Our Tax Code calculator decodes what yours means.
Once your income passes £100,000, your Personal Allowance is cut by £1 for every £2 you earn above it, disappearing entirely at £125,140. Because you pay 40% tax and lose allowance worth another 20%, the effective marginal rate on income between £100,000 and £125,140 is 60%.
A pension contribution reduces your adjusted net income, so paying £10,000 gross into a pension here can restore the full allowance and effectively cost you only £4,000 net. This is one of the most valuable planning moves for higher earners.
You must file a Self Assessment tax return (form SA100) if any of the following apply:
File online through the HMRC Self Assessment portal. Late filing triggers an automatic £100 penalty, rising after three, six and twelve months. Our Self Assessment calculator estimates what you'll owe.
From April 2026, sole traders and landlords with qualifying income over £50,000 must keep digital records and send quarterly updates through MTD-compatible software. From April 2027 this extends to those over £30,000. See our Making Tax Digital hub.
For the full list of allowable employee expenses, see GOV.UK: tax relief for employees.
No sign-up. Updated for 2026/27. Pair these with the guide above.
Class 1 & 4 NICs, State Pension entitlement and the 15% employer rate.
Read guide →Six bands and how Scottish rates differ from the rest of the UK.
Read guide →The £1,000 trading allowance and when to register for Self Assessment.
Read guide →Tax on interest and the higher dividend rates from April 2026.
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Clear answers on bands, codes, Self Assessment and reliefs for 2026/27.
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Find an expert →UK Tax Hero provides general tax guidance and a free expert-matching service for the 2026/27 tax year. It is not personal tax, legal or financial advice. Figures are based on published HMRC rates and may change. Always confirm details on GOV.UK or with a qualified professional before acting.