National Insurance Calculator UK 2026/27 — Employee & Self-Employed | LazyTools

National Insurance Calculator UK 2026/27

Calculate your National Insurance contributions for 2026/27. Covers Class 1 employee NI at 8% (£12,570–£50,270) and 2% above, Class 4 self-employed NI, and employer NI at 15% above £9,100.

Employee vs self-employed NI2026/27 NI thresholdsEmployer NI calculationState pension years

National Insurance Calculator UK Tool

Your earnings and employment type
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2026/27: Employee NI 8% (£12,570-£50,270), 2% above. Self-employed Class 4: 6%. Employer NI: 15% above £9,100 (2026/27); from April 2025: 15% above £5,000 (Budget 2024).
Enter values and click Calculate
Annual National Insurance
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Monthly NI contribution
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£ per month
NI on earnings up to UEL
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£ at main rate
NI on earnings above UEL
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£ at 2% rate
State pension qualifying years
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per year of sufficient NI
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★ Key features

Why use this free national insurance calculator uk?

Built with the inputs and context most competing calculators skip - deeper parameters, current rates, and actionable results.

🇫🇬
2026/27 reduced rates
Correct 8% employee and 6% self-employed main rates following April 2024 reductions.
📈
Employee vs self-employed vs employer
All three NI classes calculated separately with correct 2026/27 thresholds.
🧳
State pension qualifying year check
Shows whether your income level generates a qualifying year for State Pension.
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Monthly NI shown
Annual NI divided by 12 for payroll planning.
Class 2 + Class 4 self-employed split
Self-employed calculation breaks out Class 2 flat rate and Class 4 profit-based NI.
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Free, browser-based
No data stored. 100% private.
📄 How to use

How to use this national insurance calculator uk

1
Enter your annual income or profit
Employees enter annual salary; self-employed enter taxable profit before NI.
2
Select your employment type
Employee, self-employed, or employer NI calculation.
3
Click Calculate
See annual NI, monthly cost, rate breakdown, and state pension qualifying status.
📚 Reference

National Insurance rates and thresholds 2026/27

NI classRateThresholdApplies to
Class 1 employee (main)8%£12,570 to £50,270Employees
Class 1 employee (additional)2%Above £50,270Employees
Class 1 employer15%Above £9,100Employers (no upper limit)
Class 2 self-employed£179.40/yr flatIf profits above £6,396Self-employed
Class 4 main rate6%£12,570 to £50,270Self-employed
Class 4 additional rate2%Above £50,270Self-employed
Lower Earnings Limit£6,396State pension qualifyingAll workers
Upper Earnings Limit£50,270Rate change pointAll classes
📈 vs the competition

How this calculator compares

LazyTools fills the gaps most competing tools leave open - current rates, deeper inputs, and actionable context.

FeatureLazyToolsgov.uk NI toolMoneySavingExpertSalaryBot
2026/27 reduced 8% rate✓ Yes
Self-employed Class 2+4✓ Yes
Employer NI calculation✓ Yes
State pension qualifying check✓ Yes
Monthly NI breakdown✓ Yes
Free, no registration✓ Yes
📖 Complete guide

National Insurance Calculator UK: Complete Guide

National Insurance contributions fund the State Pension, NHS, and other state benefits. The 2026/27 rates are significantly lower than previous years following two reductions in the employee main rate, making this a particularly important calculation for budgeting and tax planning.

2024 NI rate reductions - what changed

In January 2024, the employee Class 1 main NI rate was cut from 12% to 10%. Then in April 2024, it was cut again to 8%. Self-employed Class 4 NI was simultaneously cut from 9% to 6% in April 2024. Class 2 NI for self-employed people was also abolished from April 2024 for those paying voluntarily - though low-profit self-employed people retain Class 2 credits. The combined 4 percentage point reduction for employees is worth £1,487 annually for a typical higher earner.

Employer NI: the hidden employment cost

Employers pay 15% NI on all employee earnings above £9,100 with no upper limit for 2026/27. From April 2025, following the October 2024 Budget, the employer NI rate rises to 15% and the secondary threshold falls from £9,100 to £10,500 per year. For a £50,000 salary in 2026/27, employer NI is (£50,000 - £9,100) x 15% = £5,644. From April 2025, the same salary costs (£50,000 - £5,000) x 15% = £6,750 in employer NI - an increase of £1,106. This is a cost to the employer over and above the salary paid and is why employers are incentivised to use salary sacrifice arrangements which reduce both employee and employer NI. The Employment Allowance reduces the employer NI bill by up to £5,000 for eligible businesses.

NI and the State Pension: qualifying years

The new State Pension (introduced 2016) requires 35 qualifying years of NI contributions to receive the full amount (£221.20 per week in 2026/27). A minimum of 10 qualifying years is needed for any State Pension entitlement. A qualifying year is any tax year in which you earn above the Lower Earnings Limit (£6,396) or pay voluntary Class 3 NI. You can check your State Pension forecast and NI record through the HMRC personal tax account.

Self-employed NI: Class 2 and Class 4

From April 2024, the self-employed pay: Class 4 NI at 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% on profits above £50,270. Class 2 NI (flat £179.40 per year) is still payable if profits exceed £6,396 but only to access State Pension credits - it is no longer required as a separate payment for most self-employed people following reform. Profits between £6,396 and £12,570 automatically generate State Pension qualifying credits without any NI payment.

Frequently asked questions

Employees pay 8% NI on earnings between £12,570 (Primary Threshold) and £50,270 (Upper Earnings Limit), and 2% on all earnings above £50,270. The 8% rate was reduced from 12% in two stages in 2024: to 10% from January 2024, then to 8% from April 2024. There is no NI on earnings below £12,570.
Self-employed people pay Class 2 NI (£179.40 per year flat rate if profits exceed £6,396) and Class 4 NI (6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% on profits above £50,270). The Class 4 main rate was reduced from 9% to 6% in April 2024. If profits are between £6,396 and £12,570, Class 2 NI is still credited for state pension purposes without payment.
Employers pay Class 1 NI at 15% on each employee's earnings above the Secondary Threshold of £9,100 per year (£175 per week). There is no upper earnings limit for employer NI - the 15% rate applies to all earnings above £9,100. The Employment Allowance allows eligible employers to reduce their NI bill by up to £10,500 per year.
Yes - a qualifying year for State Pension requires NI contributions on earnings at or above the Lower Earnings Limit of £6,396. You need 35 qualifying years for the full new State Pension (£221.20 per week in 2026/27) and at least 10 qualifying years for any State Pension. Class 2 NI from self-employment also counts as qualifying years.
The Primary Threshold (£12,570 in 2026/27) is the point at which employees start paying NI. Below this threshold, no employee NI is due but earnings still count as qualifying for State Pension if above the Lower Earnings Limit (£6,396). The Primary Threshold was aligned with the income tax personal allowance in 2022, meaning tax and NI start at the same point for most employees.
The Upper Earnings Limit (£50,270 in 2026/27) is the point at which the main NI rate (8%) drops to the additional rate (2%). It is set at the same level as the higher rate income tax threshold. Above this point, combined income tax and NI marginal rates are 42% (40% income tax + 2% NI) for earnings up to £100,000.
Yes - you can pay voluntary Class 3 NI contributions at £17.45 per week (2026/27 — confirm at gov.uk) for 2026/27 to fill gaps in your NI record. With 7 years to go before State Pension age, this can be very cost-effective: each qualifying year costs around £907 and adds approximately £6.32 per week to State Pension, paying back in about 2.75 years. HMRC has a tool to check your NI record and gaps.
Company directors can choose any salary structure within PAYE. The most tax-efficient structure in 2026/27 is typically a salary of £12,570 (to use the personal allowance with no income tax) or £9,100 to £12,570 (to qualify for State Pension without paying NI). The remainder is taken as dividends which attract dividend tax rather than income tax and are not subject to NI.

How to use this calculator for tax planning

Financial calculations are most valuable when used proactively - before making decisions, not after. Use this calculator to model different scenarios: what happens if you increase the investment amount by 20%? What if the tenure changes by 5 years? What if the interest rate moves by 1%? Scenario modelling with a calculator is free and takes minutes, but the decisions it informs can save or earn lakhs of rupees over a lifetime. Revisit your calculations annually as rates, tax rules, and personal circumstances change - the financial landscape in India evolves significantly year to year.

Regulatory and rate changes to watch in 2024-25

The financial year 2024-25 has seen significant changes affecting personal finance calculations in India and the UK. In India: Union Budget July 2024 increased LTCG rate to 12.5% and exemption to Rs.1.25 lakh; STCG on equity increased to 20%; small savings scheme rates have been stable since January 2024. In the UK: April 2024 saw employee NI reduce from 12% to 8% and self-employed Class 4 reduce from 9% to 6%; CGT rates on residential property changed to 18%/24% following the October 2024 Budget. Always verify current rates with official sources (income tax India: incometax.gov.in; HMRC UK: gov.uk/government/organisations/hm-revenue-customs) before making significant financial decisions.

Common mistakes in personal finance calculations

The most common errors in personal financial planning: (1) Using pre-tax return rates when the investment is taxable - always compare on a post-tax basis. (2) Ignoring inflation when planning long-term goals - Rs.10 lakh needed in 20 years requires Rs.32 lakh at 6% inflation. (3) Not accounting for charges: expense ratio on mutual funds, processing fee on loans, and withdrawal penalties on fixed income instruments all reduce actual returns. (4) Planning for best-case returns rather than conservative estimates - model at 10% return, not 15%, for long-term equity SIP projections. (5) Treating past performance as future guarantee - historical equity fund returns have been volatile decade to decade.

Privacy and data security

All calculations on LazyTools run entirely in your browser using JavaScript. No input data - salary, investment amounts, loan details, or personal information - is transmitted to any server, stored in any database, or shared with any third party. The calculator works offline once the page has loaded (except Google Fonts). LazyTools is monetised through Google AdSense display advertising, which uses advertising cookies independent of calculator functionality. If you prefer completely ad-free use, your browser's reading mode or a content blocker will hide the ad units without affecting the calculator.

Linking this calculator to your broader financial plan

No single financial calculator exists in isolation. Take-home pay calculations feed into EMI affordability checks. Loan EMI calculations feed into investment capacity planning. Investment corpus calculations feed into retirement income planning. Use the related tools linked below to build a complete picture of your financial position. A comprehensive financial plan typically covers: income and tax optimisation (salary structure, HRA, 80C investments); debt management (home loan, car loan, personal loan); medium-term savings (SIP, ELSS, PPF, RD); and long-term retirement planning (EPF, NPS, SSY for daughter). Each LazyTools calculator addresses one piece of this puzzle.

Getting the most from this calculator

For the best results, revisit this calculator whenever your financial situation changes: salary increment, change in loan, new investment, or a change in tax rules. Financial calculations are dynamic - a 1% change in interest rate or return can significantly alter outcomes over 10-20 year horizons. LazyTools calculators are updated to reflect current rates and tax rules. Bookmark this page and return annually to recalibrate your financial plan. If you are making a significant financial decision - taking a large loan, making a major investment, or restructuring your salary - consider consulting a certified financial planner (CFP) or chartered accountant (CA) alongside using this calculator. Free calculators provide accurate mathematical output but cannot replace personalised professional advice that accounts for your specific circumstances, goals, risk tolerance, and legal situation.

Legislation and government sources (2026/27 tax year)

This calculator uses rates and rules from the following Acts of Parliament and HMRC guidance documents. All rates are for the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027) unless stated otherwise. Verify current rates at gov.uk before making significant financial decisions:

Disclaimer: This calculator provides mathematical calculations only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Rates correct as at May 2026 (2026/27 tax year). Consult a qualified accountant, tax adviser, or financial planner for advice specific to your circumstances.

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