Make debt deductions from an employee's pay
Deductions for a non-priority order
Non-priority orders are used for debts from a county court judgment (CCJ).
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Calculate your employee’s earnings.
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Take off the normal deduction rate from their earnings.
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Take off an extra £1 towards your administrative costs (if you want to).
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Pay your employee the remainder of their earnings. You must pay them at least their protected earnings rate.
You can still deduct the £1 if it takes your employee’s income below their protected earnings rate - but not if it takes their income below the National Minimum Wage.
Making a full deduction
Deduct the full amount from your employee’s earnings if it does not take them below their protected earnings rates.
Example Your employee’s earnings this payday are £190. Their protected earnings rate is £150. The normal deduction is £25.
You pay your employee £164 (£190 minus £26). You send £25 to the court and keep £1 towards your costs.
When you cannot make a full deduction
Do not carry any unpaid difference over to the next payday if the full deduction would take the employee below their protected earnings rate.
Example Your employee’s earnings this payday are £170. Their protected earnings rate is £150. The normal deduction is £25.
You can deduct £20 this time. You pay your employee £149 (£170 minus £21). You send £20 to the court and keep £1 towards your costs.
On the next payday, their earnings are £190. You deduct the normal amount of £25.
You pay your employee £164 (£190 minus £26). You send £25 to the court and keep £1 towards your costs.
When you cannot make any deduction
Do not carry the deduction over to the next payday if the employee’s earnings are below their protected earnings rate.
You have to tell the Centralised Attachment of Earning Payments (CAPS) office you could not make a deduction. Send an email to caps@justice.gov.uk with the:
- court case number
- attachment of earnings order number
- name of the employee
- reason you could not make any deduction
Example Your employee’s earnings this payday are £140. Their protected earnings rate is £150. The normal deduction is £25.
You cannot deduct anything this time. You’re not allowed to deduct £1 for your own costs. Email the CAPS office to tell them.
On the next payday, their earnings are £190. You deduct the normal amount of £25.
You pay your employee £164 (£190 minus £26). You send £25 to the court and keep £1 towards your costs.
Paying your employee for a different pay period
Recalculate the protected earnings rate and normal deduction rate if you pay your employee for a different period than usual.
Example You normally pay your employee on the last day of the month. Their protected earnings rate is £550. The normal deduction is £70.
You include an extra pay day on 9 December.
For the 9 days, calculate your employee’s:
- earnings (£792.22 divided by 31 days, multiplied by 9 days = £230)
- protected earnings (£550 divided by 31 days, multiplied by 9 days = £159.68)
- deduction (£70 divided by 31 days, multiplied by 9 days = £20.32)
You pay your employee £206.68 (£230 minus £21.32). You send £20.32 to the court and keep £1 towards your costs.
Holiday pay in advance
Use the same process if you’re paying your employee holiday pay in advance.
You’ll need to work out the different rates for:
- the month when you give pay in advance
- the following month when you’d pay them less than normal
Example You normally pay your employee on the last day of the month. In July you include 5 weeks’ worth of pay. Their protected earnings rate is £550. The normal deduction is £70.
For the normal month plus the extra week (38 days), calculate your employee’s:
- earnings (£792.95 divided by 31 days, multiplied by 38 days = £972)
- protected earnings (£550 divided by 31 days, multiplied by 38 days = £674.19)
- deduction (£70 divided by 31 days, multiplied by 38 days = £85.81)
You pay your employee £885.19 (£972 minus £86.81). You send £85.81 to the court and keep £1 towards your costs.
In August, use the same process to work out their earnings, protected earnings and deduction. You’d work it out for 24 days (31 days minus 7 days you’ve already paid them for).