PAYE & NI Employing Your Spouse
Please select an option:
- An Introduction to PAYE
- Payslips
- Employing Your Spouse
- Tax-free Gifts to Staff
- Don’t Pay Too Much NI
- National Insurance Planning
- Minimising the risk of PAYE & NIC inspections
- How to survive a PAYE/NI inspection
- Benefits in kind & expenses payments
- Dispense With Dispensables
- Employed or self employed
- Personal service companies
- Child tax credit & working tax credit
- Your job
When considering the overall tax position of your family, it is worth considering employing your spouse in your business.
This is a means of transferring income from you to your spouse. It is likely to show a tax saving if your spouse has unused personal allowances or pays tax at a lower rate than you do.
In order to justify a salary, the following points must be borne in mind:
- the level of salary must be commercially justifiable
- the salary must actually be paid to your spouse (and therefore affordable for you)
- the National Minimum Wage regulations are likely to apply
As well as a salary, you may be able to pay premiums for a special pension arrangement for your spouse. These should not be taxable on your spouse and should save you tax as a business expense.
It may also be possible to provide your spouse with a 'company car', which should not give rise to any tax charge if the combined annual salary and notional Benefit-in-kind is below £8,500, although again the need for commercial justification should be borne in mind.
All the above considerations apply equally to an unmarried partner or indeed to any other individual.
Administering a salary
If your spouse has no other employment, a Form P46 should be signed with the Statement B ("This is my only or main job") ticked. You may then pay up to the Primary Threshold for employees national insurance (£89 per week for 2003/04) without any further formality.
If you already have a PAYE scheme for other employees, or don't mind setting up a scheme for your spouse, you should consider the following points:
- a salary between £75 and £89 per week will protect an entitlement to basic state pension and other contributory benefits without incurring and actual National Insurance liability
- a salary between £89 and £595 per week is subject to employees' national insurance at 11% and employers' national insurance at 12.8%
- the income tax position depends on your spouse's personal circumstances
- the amount of salary exceeding £595 a week is subject to employees' national insurance at 1% and employers' national insurance at 12.8%, without upper limit