Summary
Salary sacrifice is an arrangement where an employee gives up part of their contractual salary in exchange for a non-cash benefit, most commonly an employer pension contribution. Because the sacrificed amount is never received as salary, it is not subject to income tax or employee National Insurance, creating a tax saving compared to receiving the salary and then contributing to a pension personally.
How it works
The mechanism
In a standard pension contribution, you earn your gross salary, pay tax and NI on it, and then contribute to your pension (with tax relief added back). With salary sacrifice:
- Your contractual salary is permanently reduced by the sacrifice amount
- Your employer pays the sacrificed amount directly into your pension
- You pay income tax and NI only on the reduced salary
- Your employer also saves on employer NI (15% from April 2025)
Tax savings comparison
For a £50,000 earner sacrificing £5,000 into a pension:
Without salary sacrifice (relief at source):
- Gross pay: £50,000
- Employee pension (5% post-tax): £4,000 gross into pension (£3,200 from salary + £800 tax relief)
- Income tax on £50,000: varies, but NI on full salary
With salary sacrifice:
- Contractual salary reduced to £45,000
- Employer pension contribution: £5,000
- Income tax and NI calculated on £45,000 only
- Employee NI saving: £5,000 x 8% = £400
- Employer NI saving: £5,000 x 15% = £750
The employee NI saving (8% or 2% depending on band) is the key advantage of salary sacrifice over relief at source.
Eligible benefits
Salary sacrifice is HMRC-approved for:
- Pension contributions (most common)
- Cycle to work schemes
- Ultra-low emission vehicles (electric cars)
- Childcare vouchers (legacy schemes)
- Workplace nurseries
It cannot be used to reduce salary below the National Minimum Wage.
Worked example
Salary: £60,000, sacrificing £6,000 for pension
- New contractual salary: £54,000
- Income tax saved: £6,000 x 40% = £2,400 (same as relief at source for higher-rate payer)
- Employee NI saved: £6,000 x 2% = £120 (above upper earnings limit)
- Employer NI saved: £6,000 x 15% = £900
- Total NI saving: £1,020
- Pension pot receives: £6,000 (full amount, no leakage to NI)
With relief at source, the employee would pay NI on the £6,000 before contributing, losing the £120 employee NI saving.
Upcoming changes (April 2029)
From April 2029, the NI exemption for salary sacrifice pension contributions will be capped at £2,000 per year. Amounts above £2,000 will be subject to both employee and employer Class 1 NICs. This significantly reduces the advantage for higher earners making large pension contributions.
Inputs explained
- Gross salary — your current annual salary before sacrifice
- Sacrifice amount or percentage — how much to sacrifice for pension
- Tax year — determines rates and thresholds
Outputs explained
- New contractual salary — your reduced gross pay after sacrifice
- Take-home pay comparison — net pay with and without salary sacrifice
- NI saving — the additional tax saving from salary sacrifice vs relief at source
- Pension contribution — the total amount going into your pension
- Employer NI saving — often shared with the employee or added to pension
Assumptions & limitations
- Salary sacrifice permanently reduces your contractual salary, which can affect mortgage applications (lenders may assess the lower salary), maternity pay (SMP is based on actual earnings), and death-in-service benefits.
- The calculator assumes the employer passes on their NI saving as an additional pension contribution. Some employers retain this saving.
- Cannot reduce salary below the National Minimum Wage (£12.21/hour from April 2025).
- After April 2029, amounts above £2,000 will lose the NI advantage, making the calculation more complex for large contributions.