[ BracketMath ]

UK Tax Year 2026/27 · Personal Ltd Co · Optimiser

Software contractor on £110,000

Personal Ltd Co. Outside IR35. Age 38. Pension preference: aggressive.

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

£39,440

Pension

£60,000

Effective rate

9.6%

Marginal rate

8.8%

How much tax does a software contractor on £110,000 actually pay in 2026/27?

Short answer: £10,560 per year — an effective rate of 9.6% on gross company profit.

What's in that number? For a Ltd Co director the figure is the sum of five lines: corporation tax (£6,896), employer NI (£1,136), employee NI (£0), personal income tax (£0) and dividend tax (£2,529). The optimiser placed £12,570 of salary, £29,399 of dividend and £60,000 of employer pension contribution to produce that figure — the lowest total in the searched grid.

What's the marginal rate on the next £1? 8.8%. This is the number that matters for "is one more invoice worth the cost in lost benefits / extra effort?" decisions — it is always higher than the average effective rate.

How does this compare to PAYE employment at the same gross? The PAYE figure for a £110,000 salaried employee in 2026/27 is roughly £47,300 of combined income tax + employee NI. The structure-specific savings come from where the deductions sit, not whether they sit anywhere — see the contractor tax guide for the side-by-side maths.

The numbers, line by line

Optimum salary £12,570
Optimum dividend £29,399
Optimum pension £60,000
Net cash (optimum) £39,440
Net wealth (cash + pension) £99,440
Rule-of-thumb net cash £71,413
Rule-of-thumb net wealth £71,413
Saving vs rule of thumb £28,027
Effective rate on profit 9.6%
Marginal rate (next £1 dividend) 8.8%

Why this scenario is different

Compared to the closest peer profile — IT contractor at £110,000 — this scenario sits £0 higher on gross income. That moves net cash by +£0, the pension contribution by +£0, and the effective rate by +0%. The effective rate moves only modestly — both scenarios sit inside the same binding tax band. The optimiser shifts £0 of the extraction out of the dividend slice, and £0 out of pension contributions.

Questions this scenario raises

Why does the page link to specific other professions?

The five linked pages at the bottom are computed by a similarity metric over (profession, income, structure, age band) — the closest five neighbours in that space, not the same five pages every row links to. The aim is a genuine cross-link graph rather than a star pattern that search engines correctly read as a pSEO signal.

Should I take dividends now or wait until next tax year?

Tax-year-end timing matters: a dividend declared in March 2027 is taxed at 2026/27 rates; one declared in April 2027 falls into 2027/28 (potentially still in the same calendar year). If your 2026/27 personal income is bunched in basic-rate territory and 2027/28 will be in higher-rate, accelerate. If the reverse, defer. The mathematical structure is "level the tax-band utilisation across years if income is volatile."

Are dividend tax rates rising in 2026/27?

No — the 8.75% / 33.75% / 39.35% rates were set in 2022 and have been held flat through 2026/27. The Dividend Allowance has been reduced from £2,000 (2022/23) to £500 (2024/25 onwards) which has the same effect as a ~£175 tax rise at any rate band. This figure is built into every dividend-related calculation on the site.

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.

What if I have rental income alongside this self-employment?

Add it to the `otherIncome` field of the calculator. Property income is taxed at non-savings, non-dividend rates (so stacks alongside salary in the band schedule). The first £1,000 of rental income can also be sheltered by the separate Property Allowance under FA 2017 s.16.

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.