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True Cost to Employ Someone on £70,000

Senior · HMRC 2025-26 & 2026-27 · updated for 15% employer NI from 6 April 2025

Quick answer

£71,321 (small employer, 2025-26)

Effective overhead on top of salary: 15.8%

The true cost to a UK employer of a £70,000 salary is about £71,321 in 2025-26 (small employer, Employment Allowance applied): salary £70,000 + £9,750 employer NI (15% over £5,000) + £1,321 auto-enrolment pension (3% on £6,240–£50,270 qualifying earnings) − £9,750 Employment Allowance = £71,321. Effective overhead rate: 15.8%.

Breakdown: small employer (Employment Allowance applied)

Line item 2025-26 2026-27
Gross salary £70,000 £70,000
+ Employer NI (15% over £5,000) £9,750 £9,750
+ Auto-enrolment pension (3% on £6,240–£50,270) £1,321 £1,321
− Employment Allowance offset (up to £10,500) −£9,750 −£9,750
True cost per employee £71,321 £71,321

Large employer: add the Apprenticeship Levy

If your annual UK pay bill is over £3 million, HMRC charges a 0.5% Apprenticeship Levy on the whole payroll (minus a £15,000 allowance). For a headcount of 100 staff each on £70,000 (total payroll £7,000,000), that works out to about £200 per employee per year on top of the employer NI and pension. Large employers are also typically not eligible for the £10,500 Employment Allowance.

Compare with other salary bands

Want different assumptions?

The numbers above use a 3% minimum auto-enrolment pension on qualifying earnings only. Raise the pension rate, change headcount, or toggle Employment Allowance / Apprenticeship Levy on the interactive Employer Cost Calculator.

Frequently asked questions

What is the true cost of a £70,000 salary to a UK employer?

For 2025-26, a £70,000 salary costs a small UK employer about £71,321 per year, rising to £71,321 in 2026-27. That includes £9,750 in Class 1 employer NI (15% over the £5,000 secondary threshold), £1,321 in minimum 3% auto-enrolment pension on qualifying earnings (£6,240–£50,270), offset by £9,750 of the £10,500 Employment Allowance if eligible.

How is employer National Insurance calculated on £70,000?

HMRC Class 1 secondary (employer) NI is 15% on earnings above the £5,000 secondary threshold (both 2025-26 and 2026-27). For £70,000, that's 15% × £65,000 = £9,750 per year before any Employment Allowance offset.

Does every employer pay the Apprenticeship Levy on £70,000?

No — only employers with an annual pay bill over £3 million pay the 0.5% Apprenticeship Levy, and the first £15,000 is offset by the Levy Allowance. A small business paying one person £70,000 is well below the threshold and pays nothing. A large employer with 100+ staff on £70,000 would pay roughly £200 per employee per year.

Can Employment Allowance reduce the cost of hiring on £70,000?

Yes — eligible small employers can offset up to £10,500 of Class 1 employer NI per tax year (2025-26 and 2026-27). On a £70,000 salary that offset is worth £9,750. Employment Allowance is only available to businesses whose employer NI bill in the previous tax year was under £100,000.

What does the true cost exclude?

This calculation covers the mandatory HMRC on-costs: employer NI, minimum auto-enrolment pension, and Apprenticeship Levy. It excludes statutory sick pay, maternity/paternity pay, holiday pay (20 days + 8 bank holidays), training, equipment, recruitment agency fees, and any discretionary benefits like private medical insurance or bonuses.

Related Calculators

Last updated 4 May 2026Tax year 2025-26

Data sources: HMRC (gov.uk/hmrc)

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by UK Tax Tools Editorial Desk

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