In the UK tax system, personal allowance, typically ã12,570 in tax year 2025-26, is the threshold above which income tax is levied on an individual's taxable income. Taxable income is money earned from employment, profits from self-employment, some state benefits, most pensions including state pensions, rental income, benefits from a job, income from a trust, and interest on savings. A person who has taxable income below their personal allowance in a given tax year does not pay income tax; otherwise, tax must be paid on income above personal allowance.
There is an additional blind person's allowance of ã3,130. The marriage allowance allows a person earning less than ã12,570 to transfer ã1,260 of personal allowance to a husband, wife or civil partner. Historical additional allowances for married couples and age related allowances for over-65s and over-75s and an allowance on mortgage interest have been phased out.
From April 2010 personal allowance is tapered for people earning over ã100,000 a year: for every ã2 earned above ã100,000 the personal allowance is reduced by ã1 until incomes above ã125,140 have zero personal allowance. The additional ã2 of income and the ã1 removed from the tax free allowance are taxed at 40%, resulting in ã1.20 ((2 + 1) * 40%) tax being paid for every additional ã2 of income, a marginal tax rate of 60% (1.20 / 2 * 100) on incomes between ã100,000 and ã125,140.
There are additional tax allowances on income from savings interest and on rental income for resident landlords. Earnings from capital gains, and dividends have different tax thresholds and are taxed at different rates to income tax. Individuals also pay National Insurance Contributions an additional tax on income (paid at different rates by employees and employers).
The taper creates an unusual situation where income between ã100,000 and ã125,140 is taxed at a higher effective rate than income above ã125,140. For employees, adding National Insurance contributions of 2% results in a combined marginal rate of 62% in this band.
The number of taxpayers affected has grown significantly due to fiscal drag. The ã100,000 threshold has remained unchanged since its introduction in April 2010, while earnings have risen with inflation. According to HMRC estimates obtained via Freedom of Information request:
The freeze on income tax thresholds, announced in 2021 and extended in the 2025 Budget until April 2031, has accelerated this trend.
For families with young children, the ã100,000 threshold has additional significance beyond income tax. Adjusted net income above ã100,000 disqualifies parents from:
For example, a parent earning ã100,000 with two pre-school-age children retains their full personal allowance and qualifies for both 30 hours of free childcare (worth approximately ã12,000 per year for two children) and Tax-Free Childcare (worth up to ã4,000 per year for two children). If their income rises by just ã500 to ã100,500, they lose ã250 of their personal allowance and become ineligible for both childcare schemes. The ã500 gross pay increase, therefore, results in a net loss of at least ã15,000 per year.
Taxpayers can reduce their adjusted net income below ã100,000 to preserve some or all of their personal allowance. Common methods include:
Scottish taxpayers face a higher effective rate in this band due to Scotland's advanced rate of 45% (rather than 40%) applying between ã75,001 and ã125,140. Combined with the personal allowance taper, this creates an effective marginal rate of 67.5% before National Insurance.
The trajectory of the value of the personal allowance in recent years, both in real terms and relative to earnings, is recorded by the Institute for Fiscal Studies. The allowance was raised significantly between April 2007 and April 2019, but has increased only slightly since, falling in real terms due to inflation, while (projected to 2027) remaining above the 2010 level.
On 22 June 2010, the new Chancellor George Osborne, as part of the coalition deal which sought to increase the Personal Allowance to ã10,000 from April 2015 per Lib Dem policy, made the first increase of ã1,000, making it ã7,475 for the 2011-12 tax year. During the 2011 Budget, the allowance was raised by ã630 to ã8,105 from April 2012. In 2013, George Osborne revised the plans to increase the Personal Allowance and bring forward the date at which it would reach the ã10,000 target. This resulted in the allowance being raised to ã9,440 from April 2013, before being increased to ã10,000 from April 2014, a year earlier than originally planned. In a series of increases personal allowance rose to ã12,500 by April 2019. In the March 2021 budget Chancellor Rishi Sunak increased personal allowance to ã12,570 for April 2021 but announced a freeze in all income tax thresholds thereafter until April 2026. In November 2022 Jeremy Hunt extended the freeze in income tax thresholds to April 2028. In October 2024 the new Chancellor Rachel Reeves intended to continue with the freeze in personal tax thresholds until April 2028.
Married Man's allowance was the allowance for a legally married couple. The allowance was given at the man's highest rate of tax. During the early-1990s, then-Chancellor of the Exchequer, Norman Lamont overhauled the allowance and introduced the 10% allowance, which meant that all men had the same amount of money in their pocket, irrespective of highest tax rate. The allowance was scrapped from April 2000, first being announced in then-Chancellor Gordon Brown's 1999 budget, with the exception of people married, or in civil partnerships (introduced in 2005) where one spouse was born before 6 April 1935.