Tax Refund Calculator

Have you overpaid tax? Enter your gross income and actual tax deductions to check instantly. Covers wrong tax codes, emergency tax, mid-year leavers, and unclaimed work expenses. Updated for 2025/26.

Tax looks correct

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£5k£200k
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£0£80k
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£0£10k
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£0£5k

Common flat-rate allowances: £60/yr uniforms/tools, £312/yr working from home (6 Apr 2020 onwards).

Tax looks correct

Tax looks correct

Your tax deductions look correct within rounding tolerance. Your employer is using the right tax code.

Tax comparison

Income Tax

You paid£4,486
Correct amount£4,486

National Insurance

You paid£1,794
Correct amount£1,794
Underpaid£0
Total paid£6,280
Correct total£6,280

Visual comparison

You paid£6,280
Correct amount£6,280

Your effective rate

17.94%

Correct effective rate

17.94%

Emergency tax code (0T)?

If your employer used an emergency tax code (0T or BR), you could have overpaid up to £2,514 in income tax this year. Emergency codes apply no personal allowance — check your payslip for "0T", "BR", or "W1/M1".

Common reasons for overpaid tax

  • Wrong tax code — emergency codes (0T, BR) apply no personal allowance. Check your payslip or P45.
  • Left a job mid-year — PAYE spreads your allowance over 12 months. If you left after 6 months, you may have used only half your allowance.
  • Multiple jobs — your second job often uses a BR code (20% on everything) when your allowance is already used on job 1.
  • Unclaimed expenses — flat-rate allowances for uniforms (£60/yr), tools, WFH (£6/week ≈ £312/yr) reduce your taxable income.

How to claim a refund

  1. Check your tax code via your HMRC Personal Tax Account (gov.uk/personal-tax-account)
  2. If your code is wrong, HMRC will update it and issue a P800 calculation
  3. Claim online for refunds under £1,000 — BACS payment in ~5 working days
  4. For work expenses, claim via Self Assessment or the P87 form
  5. You can claim for the current year and up to 4 previous tax years