How Do You Work Out Your Tax And Insurance?

How would national insurance and tax work?

  • I was wondering, if I had a part time job and worked as an apprenticeship and made £100 a week on each jobs, would I have to pay tax and national insurance because they would be classed as combined income? OR would I have to pay because u can work £110 a week without national insurance and £124.50 without tax a week. I take it I would have to pay both even tho they are different jobs? Confused?

  • Answer:

    If your earning works out to be more than your Personal Allowance amount, by adding all your earnings up, it doesn't matter if earnings are from multiple places, more than one jobs etc, you will have to pay tax. For National Insurance if your earning added all up is more than £5720 a year you will pay National Insurance. Anything less you wont pay! (Personal Allowance amount for Under 65 is £6475, 65 - 74 years old is £9490 and over 75 is £9640).

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Other answers

All your income and allowances are based on your national insurance number. This number is unique to you and it helps the tax man calculate what you need to pay. It doesn't matter whether you have 1 or several jobs - they will calculate your total income and want income tax from the total amount.

Confuzzled

You pick one job to be your main job - now you contact HMRC and ask them to split your allowance. If main job is under personal allowance the surplus is allocated to the other job. NI - danged if I know

Petrusclavus

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