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

National Insurance Rates 2027/28 — Employee, Employer and Self-Employed Rates

National Insurance rates and thresholds for 2027/28. Employee, employer, Class 2 and Class 4 NI rates, the primary threshold, and how NI changes compare to 2026/27.

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 2027/28 — covering employees, employers, and the self-employed.

Last reviewed: May 2026. The rates below reflect the confirmed position. Any changes announced in the autumn 2026 Budget will be updated here.

Employee National Insurance — 2027/28 (Class 1 Primary)

EarningsNI rate
Up to £12,570 (primary threshold)0%
£12,571 – £50,270 (upper earnings limit)8%
Over £50,2702%

Annual NI by salary (employee):

Annual salaryAnnual employee NI
£20,000£596
£30,000£1,396
£40,000£2,196
£50,270£3,016
£60,000£3,211
£80,000£3,611

Employer National Insurance — 2027/28 (Class 1 Secondary)

Earnings per employeeEmployer NI rate
Up to £5,000 (secondary threshold)0%
Over £5,00015%

Employment Allowance: Eligible employers can offset up to £10,500/year of employer NI liability. Not available to single-director companies or employers whose NI bill exceeded £100,000 in the previous year.

Annual employer NI cost per employee (examples):

Annual salaryAnnual employer NINet after EA (if eligible)
£25,000£3,000£0 (covered by EA)
£35,000£4,500£0 or partial
£50,000£6,750Variable
£70,000£9,750Not fully covered

Self-Employed National Insurance — 2027/28

Class 4 (on trading profits)

ProfitsClass 4 rate
Up to £12,5700%
£12,571 – £50,2706%
Over £50,2702%

Class 2

Class 2 NI (flat weekly rate) was effectively abolished for most self-employed people from April 2024. NI credits for state benefits are now built through Class 4 contributions only. Voluntary Class 2 payments may still be available in some circumstances — check with HMRC.

Class 3 (Voluntary — filling NI gaps)

Voluntary Class 3 rate: £17.45/week (2026/27 rate — 2027/28 rate to be confirmed). Useful for filling gaps in your NI record to qualify for the full State Pension.

Year-on-Year Comparison

Rate2022/232023/242024/252025/262026/272027/28
Employee (main)12%10%8%8%8%8%
Employee (upper)2%2%2%2%2%2%
Employer13.8%13.8%13.8%15%15%15%
Self-employed (main)9.73%8%6%6%6%6%

NI and Your State Pension

National Insurance contributions build entitlement to the State Pension and other contributory benefits. For 2027/28:

  • Full new State Pension: Requires 35 qualifying years of NI contributions or credits
  • Minimum State Pension entitlement: Requires at least 10 qualifying years
  • A qualifying year is any tax year in which you earn above the lower earnings limit (£6,396 in 2026/27) from employment, or pay Class 4 NI as self-employed, or receive NI credits (e.g. for caring, unemployment, or child benefit)

Filling gaps in your NI record: You can pay voluntary Class 3 NI to fill gaps from the past 6 years. Extended transitional arrangements allowed filling gaps back to 2006/07 at a discounted rate — this deadline closed in April 2025. Check your State Pension forecast at gov.uk/check-state-pension.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK — National Insurance rates and categories
  2. GOV.UK — Employer NI
  3. HMRC — NI thresholds