National Insurance Contributions Flashcards

1
Q

What are the factors that determine NICs?

A
  • Employment status
  • Age
  • Level of earnings
  • Residence status
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2
Q

Class 1 - Employees and Employers

Key Points:

A
  • Paid on earnings: regular wages and salary, bonus, maternity/ sick pay paid by employer.
  • Share options:
    • NICs are paid on shares that can be converted into cash acquired under unapproved share option schemes.
    • Shares acquired under approved arrangements are NIC free
  • NICs are not deducted from pay before calculating income tax.
  • Employer contributions are deducted from profits for tax purposes.
  • Employee NICs only payable to SRA.
  • NICs based on pay periods e.g. weekly, monthly and not tax-year.
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3
Q

NIC 1 - Contribution thresholds:

A
  • PCT
    • From 6 April to 5 July 2022 - £190 (£9,880)
    • From 6 July 2022 to 5 April 2023 - £242 (£12,570)
    • Annual equivalent in 2022/23 for the PCT is £11,908
  • Secondary contribution threshold - £175 - employers pay C1 above this level. (£9,100 annual equivalent).
  • LEL - £123 - minimum earnings for employee to be entitled to social security benefits. (£6,396 annual equivalent).
  • UEL - £967 - maximum level of NICs on which employee pays NIC at main rate. (£50,270 annual equivalent)
  • Secondary thresholds (UST, AUST, VUST). These are the upper limits for the 0% rate of:
    • Employers’ contributions in respect of employees aged under 21
    • Apprentices aged under 25
    • Armed Forces veterans in the first year of their civilian employment. Having
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4
Q

Rates of Class 1 NICs:

A
  • Employee
    • Below £190 pw = £0
    • Below £242 pw = £0
    • £242 - £967 pw = 13.25%
    • Above £967 pw = 3.25% (additional primary %)
  • Employer
    • below £175 pw = £0
    • Over £175 pw = 15.05% (no ceiling)
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5
Q

NICs - Married women & overseas employment:

A
  • Married Women
    • Pre-6 April 1977 married women could pay reduced NICs (7.1% instead of 13.25%).
    • Pay 3.25% above £967
    • Elections are still in force, but anulled on divorce/ remarriage/ 2 consecutive TYs with earnings below LEL.
    • Reduced rate leads to reduced benefits.
  • Overseas Employment
    • Members of EEA only pay towards SS benefits in one state - usually where they work rather than live.
    • Outside EEA, NICO will collect NICs from employees who work regularly in the UK once they have been res for 52 weeks.
    • NICO continues to collect NICs for 52 weeks for those leaving the UK to work abroad for UK employers.
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6
Q

NIC Credits - key points:

A
  • NIC record credited as if minimum contributions have been made when:
    • Unemployed and claiming certain benefits
    • On approved training course
    • Income below PCT but above LEL
    • When entitled to certain types of statutory pay
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7
Q

Self-employed - Class 2 & 4 - key points:

A
  • Class 2
    • Gives entitlement to contributory state benefits
    • Flat rate - not earnings related
    • If earning below £6,725 (2022/23) can choose not to pay
    • Earnings for the tax year are net profits shown in accounts.
    • No credit if self-employed earnings are too low.
  • Class 4
    • Does not give any entitlement to State benefits
    • Earnings related - profits chargeable to income tax, after adjusting for capital allowances and trading losses brought forward etc
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8
Q

Class 2 and 4 NIC rates:

A
  • Class 2
    • Weekly flat rate £3.15
    • Max annual payable £163.80
  • Class 4
    • Main rate - 10.25%
    • Lower annual limit £11,908
    • Upper annual limit £50,270
    • Additional rate on earnings abov euppe rlimit - 3.25%
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9
Q

Collecting NIC contributions for the self-employed - key points:

A
  • Class 2 included in SA, no payments on account, due on 31 Jan
  • Class 4 included in SA:
    • 31 January (payment on account)
    • 31 July (2nd payment on account)
    • 31st January (balancing payment)
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10
Q

Voluntary NI contributions - Class 3 - key points:

A
  • Flat rate weekly amount for UK residents who have paid insufficient Class 1 or 2 contributions during a tax year.
  • Cannot be paid in the same year as which SPA is reached or after SPA.
  • Can pay contributions going back 6 years - this will be at current rate, rather than the rate at the time.
  • Payment of Class 3s subject to residence condition:
    • be resident in UK in tax year concerned
    • have arrived during the tax year and be liable to pay class 1 or 2 NICs
    • have arrived in tax year and been resident for 26 weeks
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11
Q

State Pension - Key Points:

A
  • Forecast can be obtained online/ use form BR19 to find out how many qualifying years have been recorded.
  • Can be deferred - gain 1% for every 9 weeks of deferral (5.8%) a year), no lump sum.
  • Can be paid outside of UK, but increases only paid to those living in EEA/ countries with a reciprocal agreement. (Not Aus, NZ, SA or Canada).
  • Minimum of 10 years NICs needed for payment, 35 years for maximum payment.
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12
Q

Bereavement support payment (BSP) - key points:

A
  • For those eligible for child benefit - £3,500 one-off lump sum payable to surviving spouse/ civil partner of someone who has died, followed by up to 18 monthly payments of £350.
  • Otherwise, £2,500 one-off lump sum payable to surviving spouse/ civil partner, followed by up to 18 monthly payments of £100.
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13
Q

Is child benefit taxable?

A

No, it is paid tax-free.

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14
Q

Is the carer’s allowance taxable?

A

Yes, it is

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15
Q

Who is bereavement support payment paid to, and for how long?

A
  • Paid to - spouse/ civil partner of someone who has died.
  • Paid for 18 months
  • Claim within 3 months to obtain the full 18 months payments.
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