Skip to main content
Tax trap deep dive · 2026/27

The HICBC deep dive — High Income Child Benefit Charge 2026/27

The High Income Child Benefit Charge is one of the cruellest UK tax traps because it’s based on the income of ONE parent, not the household. A single-earner family with three children loses ~£3,000/yr of Child Benefit between £60k and £80k of income, while a dual-earner family on £80k combined keeps all of it. The 2024 reforms raised the thresholds but didn’t fix the structural unfairness.

6-minute read

What you need to know: The HICBC deep dive — High Income Child Benefit Charge 2026/27

Quick answer: The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) claws back Child Benefit when one parent's "adjusted net income" exceeds £60,000 . The charge is 1% of Child Benefit for every £200 of income above £60,000 , fully repaying it by £80,000 . For a parent of 2 children, the effective marginal rate between…

Key points:

The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) claws back Child Benefit when one parent's "adjusted net income" exceeds £60,000. The charge is 1% of Child Benefit for every £200 of income above £60,000, fully repaying it by £80,000. For a parent of 2 children, the effective marginal rate between £60k and £80k is ~52% — making salary sacrifice extraordinarily efficient in this band. The 2024 reforms moved the trigger up from £50k to £60k but the structural unfairness (based on highest single income, not household) remains.

How HICBC works in 2026/27

The charge applies to a UK parent (or parent's partner) where:

  1. One person's adjusted net income exceeds £60,000 (was £50,000 before April 2024)
  2. Either they or their partner claims Child Benefit

The charge:

Adjusted Net Income% of Child Benefit repaid
£60,000 or under0%
£64,00020%
£68,00040%
£72,00060%
£76,00080%
£80,000+100%

Child Benefit rates 2026/27

ChildWeekly rateAnnual
Eldest / only child£26.05£1,355
Each additional child£17.25£897
Number of childrenTotal annual Child BenefitHICBC clawback at £80k (100%)
1£1,355£1,355
2£2,252£2,252
3£3,149£3,149
4£4,047£4,047

Calculating the effective marginal rate

The HICBC tapers over £20,000 of income (£60k → £80k). For a parent of 2 children:

Combined with normal income tax + NI in this band (40% IT + 2% NI = 42%), the total marginal rate is ~53% for a parent of 2.

For larger families:

Number of childrenExtra marginal rate from HICBCTotal marginal rate in £60k-£80k band
16.8%48.8%
211.3%53.3%
315.7%57.7%
420.2%62.2%
HICBC is per highest individual, not householdA couple where one earns £70k and the other earns £30k pays HICBC on the £70k slice. A couple where both earn £55k pays £0 HICBC despite having £110k household income. The system is widely criticised as unfair — but no fix is in any current Government plan.

Worked example — £75,000 parent of 2

Scenario: Parent earning £75,000, 2 children, full Child Benefit claimed

HICBC calculation:

  • ANI = £75,000
  • Excess over £60,000 = £15,000
  • £15,000 ÷ £200 = 75 increments of 1%
  • Child Benefit clawback = 75% × £2,252 = £1,689

This £1,689 is paid via Self Assessment — added to the regular Income Tax + NI bill.

Effective tax position:

Gross salary£75,000
Income tax (standard)−£17,432
Employee NI−£3,711
Child Benefit received+£2,252
HICBC clawback−£1,689
Net household cash£54,420

Compare to a parent earning £60,000 with 2 children (no HICBC):

Gross salary£60,000
Income tax−£11,432
Employee NI−£3,211
Child Benefit received+£2,252
HICBC clawback£0
Net household cash£47,609

A £15,000 pay rise at this band increases net household by £6,811 — an effective net rate of 45.4% on the £15k pay rise.

The defensive playbook

Strategy 1: Pension salary sacrifice — the dominant defenceSacrificing pre-tax salary into pension reduces ANI £-for-£. A £75,000 earner sacrificing £15,000 reduces ANI to £60,000 — completely eliminating the HICBC charge. The £15,000 sacrificed costs only ~£8,150 of take-home pay (because 40% income tax + 2% NI + 11.3% HICBC effect = 53.3% marginal saving). The marginal effect is dramatic — £15,000 pension contribution costs you only £8,150 of bank-account money.
Strategy 2: Gift Aid donationsGift Aid reduces ANI by the gross amount of the donation. A £1,000 Gift Aid donation reduces ANI by £1,250 (the gross-up). For higher-rate taxpayers in HICBC band, the effective cost of giving £1,250 to charity is around £400-£500 — exceptional charity-tax-relief efficiency.
Strategy 3: EIS / VCTEIS and VCT contributions don't reduce ANI directly but provide 30% income tax relief, which can offset the HICBC bill. Higher complexity and risk than pension contributions — only suitable for some.
Strategy 4: Decline Child Benefit if you're always above £80kIf you're permanently above £80k and have no realistic way to reduce ANI below it, you can choose not to claim Child Benefit. BUT: still register for it. The registration secures NI credits for the non-working spouse (towards State Pension) and reserves the National Insurance number for the child. Just opt-out of payment. This is HMRC’s "claim but not paid" option.
Strategy 5: Timing of bonuses across tax yearsIf a December bonus would push you into HICBC band, ask whether it can be deferred to April (next tax year). Some employers will accept this for senior staff. The deferral spreads bonus income across two tax years, potentially keeping each year below £60k.

Common mistakes

Mistake 1: Stopping Child Benefit claim entirely. Always register, even if you opt out of payment. The non-working partner accrues NI credits worth ~£328/yr of future State Pension. Skipping registration permanently loses this entitlement.
Mistake 2: Forgetting Self Assessment registration. HICBC is collected via SA. If you haven't filed before, you must register by 5 October after the tax year. Missing this can trigger penalties of £100+ even if you eventually pay the HICBC correctly.
Mistake 3: Calculating HICBC on gross salary instead of ANI. ANI is salary minus pension contributions (employee) minus Gift Aid grossed-up, plus dividends/interest, minus tradable losses. Many parents under-estimate ANI relief from pension and Gift Aid.
Mistake 4: Both partners claiming Child Benefit. Only one Child Benefit claim per child. If both partners try to claim, HMRC defaults to the mother — which can complicate Self Assessment if she’s the lower earner.

Calculate your HICBC exactly

The Child Benefit HICBC calculator handles ANI, family size, the £60k-£80k taper, and shows how pension salary sacrifice reduces the bill.

Open the HICBC calculator →

Sources and methodology

HICBC framework from gov.uk/child-benefit-tax-charge. 2024 reforms (thresholds raised from £50k/£60k to £60k/£80k) from Spring Budget 2024 OOTLAR. Detailed mechanics in HMRC Capital Gains Manual and Self Assessment guidance.

UK Tax Drag is not authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority and does not provide regulated financial advice — see the content disclaimer for the full position. The methodology page documents how every calculator is built and reviewed.

Other tax traps deep dives

Editorial accountability
Open Trust Centre →

Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.

Editorial standards Editorial process Corrections policy How we make money Editorial team Methodology