Class 4 National Insurance for Self-Employed
Introduction
Class 4 National Insurance is a percentage-based contribution paid by self-employed individuals on their profits. Unlike Class 2 (flat rate), Class 4 scales with your earnings and forms the bulk of NI for higher earners.
2025/26 Rates and Thresholds
| Band | Profits | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Below threshold | £0 - £12,570 | 0% |
| Main rate | £12,571 - £50,270 | 6% |
| Upper rate | Over £50,270 | 2% |
Lower Profits Limit (LPL)
£12,570 - No Class 4 NI on profits below this amount
Upper Profits Limit (UPL)
£50,270 - Rate drops from 6% to 2% above this
How Class 4 Is Calculated
Class 4 NI is calculated on your taxable profits from self-employment.
Example 1: £40,000 Profit
- Profits below £12,570: £0 NI
- Profits £12,571 - £40,000: £27,430 × 6% = £1,645.80
- Total Class 4: £1,645.80
Example 2: £70,000 Profit
- Profits below £12,570: £0 NI
- Profits £12,571 - £50,270: £37,700 × 6% = £2,262
- Profits £50,271 - £70,000: £19,730 × 2% = £394.60
- Total Class 4: £2,656.60
Who Pays Class 4 NI?
You pay Class 4 if:
- You're self-employed (sole trader or partner)
- Your profits exceed £12,570
- You're 16 or over and below State Pension age
Multiple Self-Employments
If you have multiple self-employments, profits are combined for Class 4 calculation.
Payment Through Self Assessment
When It's Calculated
HMRC calculates your Class 4 liability when you submit your Self Assessment tax return.
Payment Timeline
For 2025/26:
- Tax year: 6 April 2025 - 5 April 2026
- Filing deadline: 31 January 2027
- Payment deadline: 31 January 2027
Class 4 is added to your overall tax bill along with Income Tax and Class 2 NI.
Class 4 vs Class 2 NI
| Feature | Class 4 | Class 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Type | Percentage of profits | Flat weekly rate |
| Rate | 6%/2% | £3.45/week |
| Purpose | General taxation | State Pension & benefits |
| Main cost | Higher earners | Minimal (~£179/year) |
Both are payable on self-employment profits above £12,570.
Reducing Class 4 NI
Legitimate Strategies
- Claim all allowable expenses - Lower profits = lower NI
- Pension contributions - Personal contributions reduce profits
- Use capital allowances - Equipment purchases reduce profits
- Timing income/expenses - Spread profits across tax years if possible
Note on Tax Planning
Class 4 NI is harder to reduce than Income Tax as fewer reliefs apply directly. Focus on reducing taxable profits through legitimate business expenses.
If You're Also Employed
Maximum NI Contributions
If you pay Class 1 NI through employment AND Class 4 through self-employment, there's a maximum annual contribution.
How It Works
- Primary threshold for Class 1: £12,570
- Combined with Class 4, HMRC ensures you don't overpay
- Excess may be refunded or offset
Over State Pension Age
If you reach State Pension age during the tax year:
- No Class 4 NI on profits after that date
- Profits are apportioned across the year
- Calculation is automatic through Self Assessment
FAQs
Does Class 4 count toward State Pension?
No. Only Class 2 NI builds State Pension entitlement. Class 4 is purely a tax.
Can I claim Class 4 as a business expense?
No. National Insurance is not an allowable business expense.
What if my profits vary year to year?
Class 4 is calculated annually. High profits one year don't affect the next year's calculation.
Is Class 4 changing soon?
The main rate was reduced from 9% to 6% in recent years. Future changes depend on government policy.
Conclusion
Class 4 NI is a significant cost for profitable self-employed individuals. At 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270 (2% above), it adds up quickly. Focus on claiming all legitimate expenses to reduce your taxable profits and thereby your Class 4 liability.
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