Income & Tax

How Employer Cost Is Calculated

How to calculate the total cost of employing someone in the UK, including employer National Insurance, pension contributions, and other statutory costs.

Verified against GOV.UK - Rates and Thresholds for Employers 2025-26 on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 4 min read

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Summary

The employer cost calculator shows the true cost of employing someone beyond their gross salary. An employee earning £50,000 costs significantly more than £50,000 to employ, once employer National Insurance contributions, pension contributions, and other statutory costs are factored in. This calculator helps businesses understand the full cost of a hire and helps employees appreciate the gap between their salary and their total employment cost.

How it works

Employer National Insurance (from April 2025)

Employers pay secondary Class 1 NICs at 15% on all employee earnings above the secondary threshold of £5,000 per year (£417/month). This is separate from the employee’s own NI contributions.

Key change for 2025-26: the rate increased from 13.8% to 15%, and the threshold dropped from £9,100 to £5,000, significantly increasing employer costs.

Workplace pension (auto-enrolment)

Under auto-enrolment, employers must contribute at least 3% of qualifying earnings (£6,240 to £50,270) to a workplace pension. Many employers contribute more — 5-10% is common for professional roles.

Other statutory costs

  • Apprenticeship Levy: 0.5% of total pay bill for employers with annual wage bills over £3 million
  • Employer’s liability insurance: legally required, typically £500-£2,000/year per employee
  • Statutory sick pay (SSP): £116.75/week (2025-26) for eligible employees
  • Holiday pay: already included in salary but represents a real cost for the hours not worked

The formula

Total employer cost = Gross salary + Employer NI + Employer pension + Other costs

Where:

  • Employer NI = (Gross salary - £5,000) x 15%
  • Employer pension = Qualifying earnings x contribution rate (min 3%)

Worked example

Employee salary: £50,000, 5% employer pension

  1. Employer NI: (£50,000 - £5,000) x 15% = £6,750
  2. Employer pension: (£50,000 - £6,240) x 5% = £2,188 (on qualifying earnings)
  3. Total employer cost: £50,000 + £6,750 + £2,188 = £58,938
  4. The employee costs 17.9% more than their gross salary

For a £100,000 employee with 10% pension:

  1. Employer NI: (£100,000 - £5,000) x 15% = £14,250
  2. Employer pension: £10,000 (on gross, common for higher earners)
  3. Total: £124,250 (24.3% above gross salary)

Inputs explained

  • Gross salary — the employee’s annual salary before any deductions
  • Employer pension % — the employer’s pension contribution rate
  • Apprenticeship levy — whether the employer has a wage bill over £3 million

Outputs explained

  • Total employer cost — the full annual cost to employ this person
  • Employer NI — the secondary NIC amount
  • Employer pension — the pension contribution amount
  • Cost premium — how much the total cost exceeds the gross salary, as a percentage

Assumptions & limitations

  • Employment Allowance (£10,500 from April 2025) can offset employer NI for eligible businesses, but is not included in this per-employee calculation.
  • Does not include recruitment costs, training, equipment, office space, or other overheads.
  • Pension contributions may be calculated on gross salary or qualifying earnings depending on the employer’s scheme design.
  • For salary sacrifice arrangements, employer NI is calculated on the reduced salary, and the employer may pass their NI saving into the employee’s pension.

Sources

employer-cost employer-ni total-employment-cost secondary-nic hiring