National Insurance UK 2026/27 — Rates, Classes, Credits and State Pension

National Insurance Rates 2026/27 — Complete UK Guide

Full breakdown of National Insurance rates and thresholds for 2026/27 tax year. Employee, employer, and self-employed NI rates, plus worked examples showing how much you'll pay.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

National Insurance rates for 2026/27 are 8% for employees on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, dropping to 2% on earnings above that. Self-employed people pay 6% on profits in the same band. Neither rate has changed from 2025/26. On a £35,000 salary, you pay £1,794 in NI this year — on top of £4,486 in income tax.

For the wider cluster covering NI guides, credits, employer costs and records, use the main National Insurance hub.

National Insurance (NI) is effectively a second income tax, but one that most people pay less attention to than income tax. For a typical employee earning £35,000, NI costs around £1,794 per year — that’s over £149 per month coming off your pay before you see it. Unlike income tax, NI only applies to earned income: it doesn’t apply to savings interest, dividends, rental income, or pension payments, which is why higher earners with investment income often have a low effective NI rate.

The 2026/27 tax year brings no changes to employee NI rates, but employers saw a significant hike from October 2024 onward — a rise from 13.8% to 15%, and a drop in the threshold from £9,100 to just £5,000. This makes employing staff meaningfully more expensive, especially for lower-paid workers.

Read more: See our Take Home Pay guide for a complete overview of this topic.

National Insurance Rates 2026/27 — Quick Reference

Employee NI (Class 1)

EarningsNI Rate
Up to £12,570/year0%
£12,571 to £50,270/year8%
Over £50,270/year2%

Self-Employed NI (Class 4)

ProfitsNI Rate
Up to £12,570/year0%
£12,571 to £50,270/year6%
Over £50,270/year2%

Employer NI (Class 1 Secondary)

EarningsNI Rate
Up to £5,000/year0%
Over £5,000/year15%

Key Thresholds 2026/27

ThresholdAnnualMonthlyWeekly
Lower Earnings Limit (LEL)£6,396£533£123
Primary Threshold (PT)£12,570£1,048£242
Secondary Threshold (ST)£5,000£417£96
Upper Earnings Limit (UEL)£50,270£4,189£967
Upper Secondary Threshold (under 21)£50,270£4,189£967

What Changed from 2025/26?

For employees, rates are unchanged from 2025/26 — the freeze on the Primary Threshold and Upper Earnings Limit continues, meaning wage growth quietly pushes more of your pay into the taxable bands each year (fiscal drag). The big 2026/27 story for NI remains the employer-side changes introduced in October 2024, which took full effect in the 2025/26 year and continue unchanged.

Change2025/262026/27
Employee NI rate8%8% (unchanged)
Self-employed NI rate6%6% (unchanged)
Primary Threshold£12,570£12,570 (frozen)
Upper Earnings Limit£50,270£50,270 (frozen)
Employer NI rate13.8%15% (increased)
Secondary Threshold£9,100£5,000 (reduced)

Key change: Employer NI increased significantly in the October 2024 Budget. The rate rose from 13.8% to 15%, and the threshold dropped from £9,100 to £5,000. This doesn’t affect your take-home pay directly, but may impact wage growth and hiring.

How Employee NI Is Calculated

Example: £35,000 Salary

StepCalculation
Gross salary£35,000
Minus Primary Threshold£35,000 - £12,570 = £22,430
NI at 8%£22,430 × 8% = £1,794.40

Example: £60,000 Salary

StepCalculation
Gross salary£60,000
Earnings between PT and UEL£50,270 - £12,570 = £37,700
NI at 8% on this band£37,700 × 8% = £3,016
Earnings above UEL£60,000 - £50,270 = £9,730
NI at 2% on this£9,730 × 2% = £194.60
Total NI£3,210.60

Example: £100,000 Salary

StepCalculation
Gross salary£100,000
NI at 8% (£12,570 to £50,270)£37,700 × 8% = £3,016
NI at 2% (above £50,270)£49,730 × 2% = £994.60
Total NI£4,010.60

NI by Salary — Quick Lookup Table

Annual SalaryMonthly NIAnnual NIEffective Rate
£15,000£16.20£194.401.30%
£20,000£49.53£594.402.97%
£25,000£82.87£994.403.98%
£30,000£116.20£1,394.404.65%
£35,000£149.53£1,794.405.13%
£40,000£182.87£2,194.405.49%
£45,000£216.20£2,594.405.77%
£50,000£249.53£2,994.405.99%
£55,000£259.20£3,110.605.66%
£60,000£267.55£3,210.605.35%
£70,000£284.22£3,410.604.87%
£80,000£300.88£3,610.604.51%
£100,000£334.22£4,010.604.01%
£150,000£417.55£5,010.603.34%

Self-Employed National Insurance 2026/27

Self-employed people pay Class 4 NI on their taxable profits. A key advantage of being self-employed from an NI perspective is that the rate is 6% (versus 8% for employees) on the main band, saving £754 per year on a £50,000 profit compared to employment. There’s also no employer NI on top. However, this is partially offset by the loss of employment rights and benefits. Class 2 NI (previously a flat £3.45/week) was abolished from April 2024, simplifying the self-employed NI system considerably.

Class 4 Rates

Profit BandNI Rate
Up to £12,5700%
£12,571 to £50,2706%
Over £50,2702%

Class 2 — Abolished But Credits Continue

Class 2 NI (previously £3.45/week) was abolished from April 2024. However, self-employed people with profits over £6,725 still automatically receive National Insurance credits for State Pension purposes — you just don’t pay separately for them anymore.

Self-Employed NI Examples

Annual ProfitClass 4 NI
£15,000£145.80
£20,000£445.80
£30,000£1,045.80
£40,000£1,645.80
£50,000£2,245.80
£60,000£2,441.80
£80,000£2,841.80
£100,000£3,241.80

Employer National Insurance 2026/27

Employers pay NI on top of your salary — this doesn’t come out of your wages, but it does affect a business’s total cost of employing you. The October 2024 Budget was highly significant here: the rate rose from 13.8% to 15% and the secondary threshold dropped from £9,100 to £5,000, meaning employers now pay NI on earnings from £5,000 rather than £9,100. For a full-time employee on £25,000, employer NI jumped from around £2,191 to £3,000 per year — an extra £809 cost per employee. For industries with large lower-wage workforces (hospitality, retail, care), this had a material impact.

Employer NI Rates

Employee EarningsEmployer NI Rate
Up to £5,000/year0%
Over £5,000/year15%

Employment Allowance

Small businesses can claim Employment Allowance of up to £10,500 per year, which reduces their employer NI bill. This means many small employers pay no employer NI at all.

Business TypeCan Claim Employment Allowance?
Company with multiple employeesYes (up to £10,500)
Sole director company (no other employees)No
Household employing nanny/carerYes
CharityYes

Employer NI Examples

Employee SalaryEmployer NI (no allowance)
£25,000£3,000
£35,000£4,500
£50,000£6,750
£75,000£10,500
£100,000£14,250

NI for Directors

Company directors have slightly different NI calculations. Instead of weekly/monthly thresholds, directors’ NI is calculated annually using the annual earnings period.

Director EarningsCalculation
Under £12,570No NI
£12,571 to £50,2708%
Over £50,2702%

This prevents directors who pay themselves irregularly (large bonus months) from accidentally exceeding thresholds.

NI Categories and Letters

Your payslip shows an NI category letter. Most employees are Category A.

CategoryWho It Applies To
AStandard employees (aged 21+)
BMarried women with reduced rate election (rare)
COver State Pension age
HApprentices under 25
JDeferment (multiple jobs)
MUnder 21
ZUnder 21, deferment

Reduced NI for Under 21s

Employees under 21 pay the same NI rates as other employees, but their employers pay 0% employer NI on earnings up to £50,270 (the Upper Secondary Threshold). This incentivises youth employment.

When NI Stops

SituationDo You Pay NI?
Reached State Pension ageNo — but employer still pays employer NI on your wages
On maternity/sick leaveDepends on whether you receive pay
UnemployedNo pay = no NI (but may get NI credits)
Self-employed but no profitNo Class 4 NI due

Building State Pension Entitlement

You need 35 qualifying years of NI contributions to get the full State Pension (worth £11,973 per year — £230.25 per week — in 2026/27). You need at least 10 qualifying years to receive any State Pension at all. The crucial point many people miss is that you don’t need to actually pay NI to build a qualifying year — you just need to earn above the Lower Earnings Limit (£6,396), or receive NI credits through benefits like Universal Credit, Child Benefit (for children under 12), or Carer’s Allowance. This matters a lot for people who take career breaks.

You build years by:

MethodThreshold
Employed — earning over Lower Earnings Limit£6,396/year
Self-employed — profits over£6,725/year
Receiving NI credits (UC, child benefit, carer’s allowance)Automatic
Voluntary contributions (Class 3)£17.45/week

If you earn between the Lower Earnings Limit (£6,396) and Primary Threshold (£12,570), you pay no NI but still build State Pension entitlement.

Multiple Jobs and NI

If you have multiple jobs, each employer calculates NI separately based on what they pay you. This can mean:

  • You pay 8% NI at each job (even if combined earnings exceed £50,270)
  • You may overpay NI if your combined earnings are high

Deferring NI (Multiple Jobs)

If you expect to pay more than the annual maximum NI due to multiple jobs, you can apply to defer NI on your second job. HMRC will refund any overpayment after the tax year.

SituationAction
Two jobs, main job over £50,270 aloneApply to defer NI on second job
Two jobs, both under £50,270Usually can’t defer
Employed + self-employedMay be able to defer Class 4

NI vs Income Tax — Key Differences

FeatureIncome TaxNational Insurance
Who paysEveryone over Personal AllowanceEmployees and self-employed over thresholds
Rates20%, 40%, 45%8%/2% (employees), 6%/2% (self-employed)
On savings interestYesNo
On dividendsYesNo
On rental incomeYesNo
On pension incomeYesNo
Stops at State Pension ageNoYes
FundsGeneral government spendingState Pension and benefits

Sources

  1. HMRC — National Insurance rates and categories
  2. GOV.UK — National Insurance: introduction