[ BracketMath ]

UK Tax Year 2026/27 · Sole Trader · Lifestyle SE

Freelance designer on £60,000

Sole Trader. Age 36. Pension preference: modest.

Every figure on this page is computed at build time by the same engines that power the live salary–dividend split, take-home and SIPP optimiser calculators. Inputs come from a single CSV row; outputs come from the engines. No static lookup tables, no hand-coded numbers.

Net cash

£44,192

Pension

£0

Effective rate

21.3%

Marginal rate

42%

How HMRC defines the band this income falls into

A freelance designer at £60,000 of gross for 2026/27 — plus any other personal income that stacks below — falls into the higher-rate band. HMRC's published rules for this band are unchanged from the figures announced in the Autumn Budget 2024 (which froze all the major thresholds at their April 2021 levels until at least April 2028).

For reference, the 2026/27 boundary numbers as published by HMRC:

  • Personal Allowance: £12,570 (full PA — tapered above £100,000 adjusted net income).
  • Basic-rate band: £12,570 to £50,270 (20% income tax, 8.75% dividend tax).
  • Higher-rate band: £50,270 to £125,140 (40% / 33.75%).
  • Additional-rate band: above £125,140 (45% / 39.35%).
  • PA taper: £1 of PA lost per £2 over £100,000 adjusted net income, fully eroded at £125,140.
  • Employer NI: 15% above the £5,000 Secondary Threshold (Finance Act 2024).
  • Employee NI: 8% main band (£12,570–£50,270), 2% above.
  • Class 4 NI (sole traders): 6% main band, 2% above. Class 2 voluntary: £3.45/week (£179.40/yr).
  • Corporation Tax: 19% small profits rate (≤ £50,000), 25% main rate (≥ £250,000), 26.5% effective marginal in between.
  • Dividend Allowance: £500 at 0%.
  • Pension Annual Allowance: £60,000 (tapered to £10,000 above £260,000 adjusted income).

For this specific row, the binding constraints are: the sole-trader Class 4 NI bands (6% / 2%) and the 40% higher-rate income-tax band.

The engine's computed bottom line for this row, given those binding constraints: net cash £44,192, pension £0, effective rate 21.3%, marginal rate 42%.

The numbers, line by line

Turnover £60,000
Taxable profits £57,000
Trading allowance vs actual expenses Actual expenses
Income tax £10,232
Class 4 NI £2,397
Class 2 NI (voluntary) £179
Net cash (year) £44,192
Net cash (monthly) £3,683
Hours-equivalent at NLW (£12.21/hr) 3,619 hrs
Effective rate 21.3%
Same turnover as Ltd Co (no pension) £44,614
Incorporate vs stay sole trader +£422 for Ltd Co

Why this scenario is different

Compared to the closest peer profile — Engineer at £60,000 — this scenario sits £0 higher on gross income. That moves net cash by +£3,264, the pension contribution by +£0, and the effective rate by −5.4%. The shift in effective rate is large enough that the binding tax constraint has changed — probably crossing a band boundary. Taxable profits change from £57,000 to £57,000 (after the trading-allowance / actual-expenses choice).

Questions this scenario raises

Does it include Scottish income tax?

No. Scotland has its own income-tax band schedule (Starter 19% / Basic 20% / Intermediate 21% / Higher 42% / Advanced 45% / Top 48% for 2026/27). National Insurance and corporation tax are still set at UK-wide rates. A Scotland-specific batch of programmatic pages is planned but is not in this batch.

How does the Pension Annual Allowance taper work?

Above £260,000 of adjusted income, the £60,000 Annual Allowance reduces by £1 for every £2 over the threshold, down to a £10,000 floor at £360,000 of adjusted income. The taper bites later than the £100k Personal Allowance taper but is similarly punitive on pension contributions specifically.

Where does the BracketMath engine source its rates?

Income tax / NI / CT / dividend rates come from HMRC's published 2026/27 rate tables (gov.uk/government/publications/rates-and-allowances-income-tax). Pension rules come from FA 2004 and the FCA's consumer guidance. Historical investment returns used in the Monte Carlo engine come from a 125-year UK gilt + UK equity series stored in src/data/historical-returns.json. Every constant carries a source URL in the source code.

Why do some columns of the table use cash and others use net wealth?

Net cash is the £ that arrive in your bank account. Net wealth includes pension contributions valued at face (£1 of pension = £1 of wealth, since it will eventually be spent — possibly at a lower marginal rate than today). The optimiser uses a `pensionWeight` parameter so the user can adjust the weight; this page sets it according to the row's `pensionPref` (0 / 0.5 / 1.0 for none / modest / aggressive).

Is the figure on this page net of accountancy fees?

Yes when relevant — the take-home calculator deducts an umbrella fee for inside-IR35 rows (£1,500/yr assumed) and the optimiser allows for an arbitrary annual business expense pot (£3,500/yr default for Ltd Co rows). Sole-trader rows assume the higher of £800/yr or 5% of turnover as actual business expenses, which approximates a low-overhead service business.

Closest peer profiles

Computed at build time by a weighted distance over profession, structure, persona, age band and gross income. Not the same five links on every page.

Methodology

Income tax, National Insurance and Corporation Tax bands taken from HMRC's 2026/27 rates and allowances tables (gov.uk/.../income-tax; corporation-tax). Pension Annual Allowance and taper rules from Finance Act 2004 / 2023. Trading allowance per ITTOIA 2005 s.783A. Voluntary Class 2 figure (£179.40/yr = £3.45/wk × 52) from HMRC voluntary NI guidance.

Style: 2026/27 tax year throughout; figures rounded to whole pounds in the user-facing prose; effective rates computed as (deductions / gross). The voice is methodological — no first person, no claimed credentials, no marketing fluff.

This page is not personalised advice; for advice regulated by the FCA, consult an adviser registered with the Financial Conduct Authority. See the full disclaimer.