Freelance & Self-Employed

Self-Employed Tax Calculator 2026/27

Designed for freelancers, independent contractors, gig workers, and tradespeople.

2026/27 HMRC rates No signup No data stored Browser-only calculation

Your details

£30,000
£
£0 £50k £100k £150k £200k

Your total earnings before any expenses.

£

Allowable costs like equipment, travel, and office supplies.

£

Reduces your taxable income for Income Tax.

Estimated annual take-home

£21,768

£1,814

/ month

£419

/ week

Breakdown

Taxable profit £25,000
Personal allowance £12,570
Income Tax £2,486
National Insurance (Class 4) £746
Total deductions £3,232
Effective tax rate 12.93%

How your income is split

Take-home Income Tax NI

Payments on Account

1st PoA (31 Jan 2028)
2nd PoA (31 Jul 2028)

Each PoA = 50% of your current tax bill. Only applies if your bill exceeds £1,000.

Take-home

£21,768

£1,814 / mo

Eff. rate: 12.93%


Am I Self-Employed or a Sole Trader?

The terms "self-employed" and "sole trader" are often used interchangeably, and from HMRC's perspective, their tax obligations are identical. However, there is a minor difference: self-employed is a general description of your employment status (meaning you are not an employee of a company), whereas sole trader is the specific business structure you use to file taxes (as opposed to a limited company or a partnership).

If you are a freelancer, gig worker, consultant, delivery driver, or tradesperson, you will register with HMRC as a sole trader to declare your self-employment income. This calculator is designed to model your entire UK tax profile under this structure, combining income tax bands, Class 4 National Insurance, pension contributions, and student loans.

Understanding Your Tax Obligations as a Freelancer or Contractor

Unlike PAYE employees whose taxes are deducted directly from their monthly paychecks, self-employed individuals must calculate and pay their taxes manually through HMRC's Self Assessment system. When you work for yourself, you are taxed on your net business profits (your total annual revenue minus allowable business expenses) rather than your gross turnover.

Every tax year, you must declare all earnings by submitting an online Self Assessment tax return. For the 2026/27 tax year (spanning April 6, 2026, to April 5, 2027), you must submit this return and pay any tax owed by January 31, 2028. Failure to do so will result in an immediate £100 penalty, with additional interest and penalties accruing over time.

How Class 4 National Insurance Affects Your Self-Employed Earnings

National Insurance contributions (NICs) are mandatory payments that qualify you for the State Pension and other social security benefits in the UK. As a self-employed sole trader, you do not pay Class 1 NI (which is reserved for employees). Instead, you pay Class 4 National Insurance.

Class 4 NI is calculated directly on your net business profits at the following rates:

  • 0% on profits up to the Lower Profits Limit of £12,570.
  • 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270.
  • 2% on profits exceeding £50,270.

Note: Mandatory Class 2 National Insurance has been fully abolished starting April 2024. If your business profits exceed the Small Profits Threshold (£7,105 in 2026/27), you automatically receive National Insurance credits to protect your state pension without having to make voluntary payments.

Claiming Allowable Expenses to Reduce Your Self-Employed Tax Bill

One of the key advantages of working for yourself is the ability to claim allowable business expenses. By deducting business costs from your gross income, you reduce your taxable profit, which directly lowers the amount of Income Tax and Class 4 National Insurance you owe to HMRC.

HMRC's golden rule is that expenses must be incurred "wholly and exclusively" for the purposes of your business. Allowable deductions typically include:

  • Office costs: Phone lines, broadband, printing, software subscriptions, stationery, and rent.
  • Travel expenses: Business mileage (excluding normal commuting), train fares, parking, and vehicle maintenance.
  • Inventory and materials: Stock purchased for resale, raw materials, and tool repairs.
  • Marketing & finance: Professional website hosting, online advertising, accounting fees, and professional indemnity insurance.

If you work from home, you can claim a proportion of your household utility bills (like heating, electricity, and council tax) using flat-rate simplified expenses or by calculating the actual business use percentage of your home.

Making Tax Digital (MTD) Requirements for the Self-Employed

HMRC's Making Tax Digital (MTD) program is now active for self-employed sole traders and landlords. If your combined qualifying gross income (annual turnover from self-employment plus any property rental income) exceeds £50,000, you are legally required to keep digital financial records and submit quarterly summaries of income and expenses to HMRC using MTD-compatible software.

The threshold is scheduled to drop to £30,000 in April 2027 and £20,000 in April 2028. It is vital to monitor your turnover throughout the year to ensure you choose approved accounting software (like FreeAgent or QuickBooks) and register before your specific compliance deadline.

Self-Employed FAQs

What is the difference between being self-employed and a sole trader?
In practice, they refer to the same tax status. "Self-employed" describes anyone who works for themselves rather than an employer, while "sole trader" is the specific legal structure where one individual owns and runs the business. Every sole trader is self-employed, though not all self-employed people are sole traders (some operate via limited companies or partnerships).
Do freelancers and gig workers register as sole traders?
Yes. If you work as a freelancer, delivery driver, tutor, contractor, or tradesperson, you must register as a sole trader with HMRC once your gross business income exceeds £1,000 in a single tax year.