Answers · UK 2025/26
What is my take-home on a £1000 day rate inside IR35 in 2026/27?
On a £1000 day rate inside IR35 working about 220 days a year, your gross is roughly £220,000. After employer National Insurance, the Apprenticeship Levy, employee tax and employee National Insurance are deducted through PAYE, your net take-home is around £105,175 to £114,032 a year, depending on pension contributions and the fee payer's exact deductions.
Full answer
Inside IR35 means HMRC treats you as an employee for tax, so the fee payer (the agency or end client) deducts Income Tax and employee National Insurance through PAYE before paying you, and also accounts for employer National Insurance and the Apprenticeship Levy. A £1000 day rate over roughly 220 working days gives gross fees of about £220,000. From this the employer National Insurance at 15% on earnings above £5,000 and the 0.5% Apprenticeship Levy are usually taken out of the assignment rate first, reducing the amount treated as your deemed salary to roughly £186,650. On that deemed salary you then pay Income Tax (£70,195.50, using the 20% basic and 40% higher rate bands, with the Personal Allowance also tapering above £100,000) and employee National Insurance (£5,743.60, at 8% then 2% above the Upper Earnings Limit). The result is net take-home of broadly £110,711 a year, although the exact figure depends on whether employer costs are deducted from your rate before or after any umbrella margin, and on pension contributions. Making employer pension contributions through an umbrella or deemed payment arrangement is highly tax-efficient inside IR35 because it reduces both Income Tax and National Insurance on the sacrificed amount. Compared with the same rate outside IR35 through your own limited company taking salary and dividends, inside-IR35 take-home at this rate is typically several thousand pounds lower because you lose the dividend tax advantage. Use the contractor take-home or take-home pay calculator to model your day rate, days worked and pension.
Try the calculator
More answers
This answer is informational only and does not constitute financial, tax or legal advice. Figures are for the 2025/26 UK tax year. See our methodology and sources.