Skip to Navigation
Carley Partnership Logo
  • Login
  • Register
Home › Guides › Tax › PAYE and NI › Employing your spouse

Employing your spouse

When considering the overall tax position of your family, it is worth considering if you can justify 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 (£139 per week for 2011/12) 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 £102 and £136 per week will protect an entitlement to basic state pension and other contributory benefits without incurring any actual National Insurance liability
  • A salary between £139 and £817 per week is subject to employees' national insurance at 12% and employers' national insurance at 13.8%
  • The income tax position depends on your spouse's personal circumstances
  • The amount of salary exceeding £817 a week is subject to employees' national insurance at 2% and employers' national insurance at 13.8%, without upper limit

Please contact us if there are any points you would like to discuss.

Primary links

  • Home
  • About us
    • Meet the team
    • Recruitment
  • Services
    • Business services
      • Audit
      • Bookkeeping & accounting
      • Business planning
      • Business startup
      • Company secretarial
      • Corporate finance
      • Corporate tax planning
      • Mergers & acquisitions
      • Payroll
      • VAT
    • Specialist sectors
      • Building profits
      • Construction industry
      • Investment and financial
      • Manufacturing
      • Medical profession
    • Personal services
      • Estate planning
      • Personal tax planning
      • Retirement strategies
      • Self assessment
      • Trusts and executorships
  • Business news
    • Business tax
    • Government Announcements
    • PAYE and NI
    • Pensions savings investments
    • Personal tax
    • Regulations
    • VAT
  • Guides
    • Business
      • Autumn Statement 2010
      • Budget archive
      • Business start-up
      • Limited companies
      • Business finance
      • Partnerships
      • Your customers
      • Your employees
      • Sales and marketing
      • IT and e-business
      • Business regulations
      • Business and the environment
      • Selling your business
    • Personal
      • An introduction to tax planning
      • Introduction to the tax system
      • Planning aspects
      • Home aspects
      • Investments and investing
      • Retirement and pensions
      • VCT & EIS
    • Tax
      • Paying less income tax
      • Year end tax planning
      • Minimising capital taxes
      • Regulation changes from April 2011
      • Tax efficient investments
      • Financial planning guide
      • Tax planning for business owners
      • Tax rates and allowances
      • Offshore issues update
      • VAT
      • PAYE and NI
      • IR35 Centre
      • Tax and business calendar
      • Autumn Statement 2011
      • Budget archive
      • Finance Bill 2012
      • The Finance Bill 2011
      • 2011 PAYE Update
  • Calculators
    • Capital gains tax
    • Business start-up
    • Car benefit
    • Corporation tax
    • Fuel cost
    • Gross profit
    • Inheritance tax
    • Loan
    • Millionaire
    • Payslip
    • Savings
    • Stamp duty
    • Unincorporated profits
    • VAT
    • Break even
  • Company news
  • Contact
  • Business
    • Autumn Statement 2010
    • Budget archive
    • Business start-up
    • Limited companies
    • Business finance
    • Partnerships
    • Your customers
    • Your employees
    • Sales and marketing
    • IT and e-business
    • Business regulations
    • Business and the environment
    • Selling your business
  • Personal
    • An introduction to tax planning
    • Introduction to the tax system
    • Planning aspects
    • Home aspects
    • Investments and investing
    • Retirement and pensions
    • VCT & EIS
  • Tax
    • Paying less income tax
    • Year end tax planning
    • Minimising capital taxes
    • Regulation changes from April 2011
    • Tax efficient investments
    • Financial planning guide
    • Tax planning for business owners
    • Tax rates and allowances
    • Offshore issues update
    • VAT
    • PAYE and NI
    • IR35 Centre
    • Tax and business calendar
    • Autumn Statement 2011
    • Budget archive
    • Finance Bill 2012
    • The Finance Bill 2011
    • 2011 PAYE Update

Related guides

  • Tax rates and allowances
  • PAYE and NI
  • Employment options
  • An introduction to PAYE
  • Employment options

Related services

  • Payroll
  • Business startup
  • Manufacturing
  • Self assessment
  • Medical profession

Related news

  • Employee earnings fall for a third decade
  • Just 10,000 firms sign up for national insurance holiday scheme
  • HMRC must clarify how Real Time PAYE will affect small firms

© Copyright Carley Partnership All rights reserved

Secondary links

  • Terms and conditions
  • Accessibility statement
  • info@carley.co.uk
  • Site map