HICBC : opt out, or claim and pay it back?
Quick answer: For most parents in 2026/27, the correct answer is claim Child Benefit and pay back via Self Assessment if you owe the HICBC charge . The reason isn't the cash — for a higher earner over £80k the cash effect is zero either way. The reason is National Insurance credits : claiming…
Key points:
- Option A: Don't claim Child Benefit at all. No HICBC owed, no admin.
- Option B: Claim Child Benefit but elect to receive £0 ("opt out"). No HICBC owed (because nothing was received), still get the NI credits.
- Option C: Claim Child Benefit, receive the money, file Self Assessment, pay HICBC back as appropriate.
For most parents in 2026/27, the correct answer is claim Child Benefit and pay back via Self Assessment if you owe the HICBC charge. The reason isn't the cash — for a higher earner over £80k the cash effect is zero either way. The reason is National Insurance credits: claiming Child Benefit for a child under 12 gives the lower-earning parent automatic NI credits (Class 3 equivalent) that count toward state pension. Opt out, and unless you actively apply for NI credits separately, you can silently lose state pension years.
The actual choice
If you're a parent and your or your partner's adjusted net income exceeds £60,000, you have three options:
- Option A: Don't claim Child Benefit at all. No HICBC owed, no admin.
- Option B: Claim Child Benefit but elect to receive £0 ("opt out"). No HICBC owed (because nothing was received), still get the NI credits.
- Option C: Claim Child Benefit, receive the money, file Self Assessment, pay HICBC back as appropriate.
Option A is wrong for most families. Option B and Option C are both correct but for different reasons. The key insight: Option A loses NI credits unless you actively claim them via a separate route (Class 3 voluntary contributions, which cost £956.80 per year in 2026/27).
Why the NI credit matters
To get a full new state pension at retirement, you need 35 qualifying years of NI contributions. Each year you miss is a permanent reduction (~£300 a year in retirement income, or ~£6,000 over a 20-year retirement). A parent who isn't working (or is working part-time below the lower earnings limit of £6,396 per year) typically doesn't pay NI — so they need NI credits.
The two routes to NI credits while caring for a child under 12:
- Claiming Child Benefit (automatic — credits are awarded based on the claim).
- HMRC's "Specified Adult Childcare Credits" if a grandparent or another adult cares for the child (requires application form CA9176).
If you don't claim Child Benefit (Option A), you don't get the credits automatically — and most parents don't realise they need to apply separately. By age 65, that's typically a 10–15 year gap in NI history for a stay-at-home parent.
The 2024 reform: why opt-out is now usually wrong
Before April 2024, HICBC kicked in at £50,000 and was fully repaid by £60,000 — a narrow band of partial repayment. From April 2024, the threshold moved to £60,000 and full repayment is at £80,000. From April 2026, the threshold remains £60,000 (HMRC has indicated no further increase for 2026/27).
This widened band changes the calculus. Many parents at £60k–£80k now retain part of their Child Benefit even after HICBC. Opt-out denies them that retained portion — and gives no NI credit benefit because Option B already provides credits.
When opt-out (Option B) is the right answer
Option B (claim but receive £0) is the right answer when:
- One partner earns above £80,000 (full HICBC clawback, zero net Child Benefit).
- Neither partner has any tax-coding or PAYE complications from receiving Child Benefit (rare but possible if you're on a marginal tax code).
- You want to avoid the admin of filing Self Assessment just for HICBC.
- The non-earning partner DOES want NI credits (Option B preserves them, Option A doesn't).
Note: HMRC requires Self Assessment registration if you owe HICBC and aren't already filing. If you'd otherwise have no Self Assessment requirement, Option B saves you that registration.
When claim-and-pay-back (Option C) is right
Option C makes more sense when:
- Adjusted net income is £60,000–£80,000 (partial HICBC — you retain part of the benefit).
- You expect income to fluctuate around £60k–£80k year to year (claiming protects you in low years).
- You're already filing Self Assessment (no additional admin overhead).
- You're using salary sacrifice to bring adjusted net income below £60k (HICBC may not apply, but if it does, claim covers you).
The retrospective claim window
If you didn't claim Child Benefit for past years (Option A) but later want the NI credits, you can backdate Child Benefit claims by up to 3 months only. NI credits cannot be retrospectively awarded by claiming late — they're lost.
Alternative: Class 3 voluntary NI contributions. £956.80 per year in 2026/27. You can buy back NI years as far back as the 2006/07 tax year (until the April 2027 deadline for years 2006–2018). After that, you can only back-pay 6 tax years.
What to actually do
Use this decision flow:
- One partner earns £80k+ and the other earns £0: Option B (opt out of payments but claim for NI credits).
- One partner earns £60k–£80k and the other earns £0: Option C (claim, receive the money, file SA, pay back the HICBC portion).
- Both partners earn £60k–£80k: Option C, with HICBC owed by the higher earner. See the which partner pays guide.
- Both partners earn over £80k: Option B for both — opt out of payment but maintain the claim for credits if the lower earner needs them.
- You're a single parent earning £60k+: Option C — claim, file SA, pay HICBC.
Calculator: HICBC calculator. Filing guide: Self Assessment repayment mechanics.
Sources and methodology
The figures above are HMRC's published 2026/27 Child Benefit rates and HICBC thresholds. See HMRC's HICBC guidance, NI credits eligibility, and the voluntary NI contributions guide. For a complex case (separated parents, multi-income household), see the tax adviser recommendation. The methodology page documents sources.
Related HICBC guides
HICBC: Opt out of Child Benefit vs Claim and pay it back
Once income exceeds £60,000 the High Income Child Benefit Charge starts; fully clawed back at £80,000. The choice between opting out and claiming-then-paying matters more than it seems.
Figures use 2026/27 UK tax-year rates and thresholds. Verify your specific situation against HMRC, FCA or MoneyHelper guidance before deciding.
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