Salary sacrifice schemes can help employees avoid new child benefit charge

-

Employers can help their staff avoid thousands in tax charges from the new High Income Child Benefit Charge through salary sacrifice schemes, says Susan Ball, director of the Employer Advisory Group at national audit, tax and advisory firm Crowe Clark Whitehill.
 
The new charge comes into force on 7 January 2013 as part of the Government’s austerity measures. It introduces means testing for family allowance recipients, and will claw back child benefit from individuals and families earning £50,000 or more through the new tax charge.
 
In assessing means for the purposes of the charge, HMRC looks at the highest earning person in the family unit, rather than the person actually receiving the child benefit. This widens the impact of the new charge, affecting over 1.2 million families. Approximately 70% of these households will lose all of their child benefit.
 
But employers can help ease the burden for employees on or just above the £50,000 earnings threshold through salary sacrifice schemes. These could potentially save employees earning between £50,000 and £60,000 thousands in High Income Child Benefit tax charges.
 
Susan Ball says:
 
“For employees who earn just over the £50,000 threshold, it may be worth looking at a scheme that could help manage the new charge. Employees on the £50,000 threshold could potentially avoid the charge by making a higher pension contribution, buying extra holiday or entering into one of the salary sacrifice schemes their employer offers, such as childcare vouchers, or cycle to work.”
 
“These measures could save the employee from being caught in the child benefit clawback, and potentially also save income tax and national insurance.”
 
With rising costs seeing many families tightening budgets, the impact of the tax charge will be felt by those on the earnings threshold, particularly single-earner families.
 
Susan Ball says:
“It’s good practice for employers to highlight to employees what is happening, and better still, remind them of the schemes on offer that could help them reduce their income below £50,000 to allow them to keep child benefit. It must be remembered that for many families, losing the benefit will result in the loss of thousands of pounds of valuable income.”

Pamela Flores is an events professional with experience at Symposium Events, a UK-based conference and events organization. She has worked in editorial and event coordination roles within the HR and expatriate management sector, contributing to the organization of major conferences including the Expatriate Management and Global Mobility conference. Her background spans online editorial work and events management within the professional conference industry.

Latest news

Martin Johnson: Why the Employment Rights Act marks the end of informal management

It’s crucial that organisations quickly realise the Employment Rights Act isn’t solely a legal change. In effect, it marks the end of informal management.

Unpaid wage claims ‘hit eight-year high’ as business failures rise

Rising insolvencies are leaving growing numbers of workers unpaid as HR teams face mounting legal risks around rushed redundancies and delayed wages.

Employers urged to rethink race for chief AI officers

Companies are being warned against rushing to appoint chief AI officers before establishing the systems and leadership structures needed to support them.

Building workforce skills for AI performance

AI is changing the way work gets done—but most organisations still lack a clear plan for building AI-ready teams.
- Advertisement -

UK risks ‘lost generation’ as youth unemployment crisis deepens

A major review warns that Britain could face a “lost generation” as youth unemployment and economic inactivity continue rising.

‘Delighted to be wrong about jobs apocalypse’, says OpenAI boss Altman

The OpenAI chief executive said human interaction remained far harder to replace than many technology leaders first predicted.

Must read

Jody Tranter: Five reasons why your business should invest in ongoing training

Read about the innovative ways you can maximise your team’s potential.

Ashley Stothard: A shrinking talent pool – what the drop in net migration means for HR professionals

The UK’s immigration landscape has undergone a seismic shift that marks a turning point in how UK employers attract, retain, and manage talent.
- Advertisement -

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you