Employment Allowance

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Check if you can claim for previous years

You can claim Employment Allowance for the previous 4 tax years if you’re a business or charity (including community amateur sports clubs). 

To claim, your employers’ Class 1 National Insurance liabilities must have been less than £100,000 the previous tax year.

You can also claim if you employ a care or support worker, for example, to care for someone with a mental or physical disability.

Previous rates

Employment Allowance for the previous 4 tax years was:  

  • £5,000 each year between 6 April 2022 and 5 April 2025  

  • £4,000 each year between 6 April 2021 and 5 April 2022

Who cannot claim Employment Allowance

You cannot claim if you’re a public body or business doing more than half your work in the public sector (such as local councils and NHS services) - unless you’re a charity.

You also cannot claim if your company has just one director and that director is the only employee liable for secondary Class 1 National Insurance.

Employees you cannot include in your claim

Certain employees cannot be included in your claim, such as:

  • someone whose earnings are within IR35 ‘off-payroll working rules’
  • someone you employ for personal, household or domestic work (like a nanny or gardener) - unless they’re a care or support worker

If you’re part of a group

If you’re part of a group of charities or companies (also known as connected companies), the total employers’ Class 1 National Insurance liabilities for the group must have been less than £100,000 in the previous tax year.

Only one company in the group can claim the allowance.

If you have more than one payroll

If you have or had more than one employer PAYE reference, the total employers’ Class 1 National Insurance liabilities for your combined payrolls must have been less than £100,000 in the previous tax year.

You can only claim Employment Allowance against one of the payrolls.

If you made off-payroll payments

Payments to off-payroll workers (for example, contractors) are known as ‘deemed payments’. Do not include employers’ Class 1 National Insurance liabilities on deemed payments in your calculations. They do not count towards the £100,000 threshold.

Check if de minimis state aid limits apply to your business

For some businesses, Employment Allowance counts as ‘de minimis state aid’ (financial support from the government). There’s a limit to how much de minimis state aid these businesses can get over a 3-year period. If they exceed the limit, they cannot claim Employment Allowance.

De minimis state aid limits are likely to apply to your business if both of the following are true:

  • your business is located in Northern Ireland
  • your business makes or sells goods or wholesale electricity

If de minimis state aid limits apply to your business, you must:

  • work out how much state aid you received in total
  • check that you were below the limit

You must do this even if your business does not make a profit.

Check you’re below the de minimis state aid limit

The limit depends on your business sector. It’s worked out in euros.

Sector De minimis state aid limit over 3 years
Agriculture products  20,000 euros
Fisheries and aquaculture  30,000 euros
Road freight transport 100,000 euros
Industrial /other 200,000 euros

Work out how much de minimis state aid you’ve received

  1. Check if you’ve received any de minimis state aid - if so, you should have been told in writing.

  2. Add the total amount you’ve received for the tax year you’re claiming for and the two tax years before this.

  3. Add this to the full amount of Employment Allowance for the year you’re claiming for. You’ll need to convert this into euros using the exchange rate from 30 March of the previous tax year.

  4. If the total is below the limit for your sector, you’re eligible to make a claim.

If you’re a connected company, the total de minimis state aid for all of the companies in the group must be below the state aid limit for your sector.

The rules are different if your business covers more than one sector.