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Contracting · Money Guide

An inside-IR35 contractor's full money picture, 2026/27

An inside-IR35 contractor pays not just their own income tax and NI, but also the employer NI on their own earnings (taken from the contract value before they ever see it), plus an umbrella company margin, plus apprenticeship levy. The maths feels brutal because it is — and it differs sharply from outside-IR35 contracting via a limited company.

The headline numbers

A contractor at £500/day for 220 working days has a contract value of £110,000. Working inside IR35 through an umbrella company, the actual take-home is approximately £59,204 a year — about £4,934 a month. The headline contract value is misleading because employer-side costs are deducted before you ever see PAYE pay.

What happens to the £110,000Amount
Contract value (day rate × 220 days)£110,000
Less: Umbrella company margin (~£25/week)−£1,300
Less: Apprenticeship levy (0.5%)−£544
Less: Employer National Insurance (15% on most of the balance)−£14,107
Gross PAYE salary you actually receive£94,049
Less: Employee income tax−£25,052
Less: Employee NI−£3,892
Less: Plan 2 student loan−£5,902
Take-home£59,204

Effective deduction from contract value: 46.2%. You keep about 54% of every gross pound the client pays.

Why the headline rate is misleading

The £500/day quoted in the contract is the value the client agency pays. Out of that, several things come off before any PAYE tax even applies:

Then on the gross PAYE figure, you pay normal employee income tax, employee NI, and any student loan / pension deductions.

The four decisions for an inside-IR35 contractor

  1. Choose the right umbrella. Margins range from £15 to £35 per week. £20 difference per week × 52 weeks = £1,040 a year you'll never see again. Use a margin-calculator and compare 3-4 named umbrellas before signing. Watch for umbrellas that promise unusually high take-home figures — these almost always involve some form of mini-umbrella, MSC, or disguised remuneration scheme that HMRC will eventually unwind, leaving you with a tax bill years later.
  2. Salary-sacrifice into a pension via the umbrella. Most major umbrellas allow salary sacrifice into a workplace pension. This is the single biggest tax-saving move available inside IR35. £500/month sacrificed saves about 42% in tax+NI for higher-rate contractors plus the employer NI saving usually flows into the pension too. The salary sacrifice calculator shows the maths.
  3. Track expenses you actually can claim. Inside IR35 strips most expense relief — but you can still claim eligible business mileage above approved rates and certain training expenses. The bar is high; HMRC's manual lists what does and doesn't qualify. Don't rely on the umbrella's "expenses calculator" as a substitute for genuine receipts.
  4. Reassess every renewal. If the contract status (inside vs outside IR35) is finely balanced, push back at renewal. The Status Determination Statement is the client's call but you can request a review and provide your own argument. The IR35 status checker walks through the indicators.

Inside vs outside IR35 — the real difference

The same £500/day contract outside IR35 (through a limited company) can deliver £15,000-£25,000 more take-home a year, primarily because of two things: salary-vs-dividend optimisation, and the absence of employer NI being deducted before PAYE. The outside-IR35 contractor money guide shows the same £500/day numbers run through a limited company.

That said, inside-IR35 has its merits: zero administrative burden (no Companies House, no Corporation Tax filing, no VAT registration), no MSC risk, full employment rights at the umbrella, and statutory benefits. For contractors who value simplicity, the after-tax difference may be worth the cost.

The most common mistake

Falling for an "umbrella" that promises 80%+ take-home. UK PAYE deductions on £100,000+ income mathematically cap take-home at about 70-72% of gross salary. Anything claiming higher is using one of: a "mini-umbrella" structure that splits payments across many shell companies (illegal), a loan-based remuneration scheme (HMRC will unwind it years later under the Loan Charge), or an offshore arrangement (tax avoidance scheme that triggers DOTAS reporting and personal liability).

If you've used one of these in the past, the HMRC disclosure facility exists to come clean before they find you.

Sources

HMRC CEST tool · GOV.UK working through an umbrella company · Employer NI rates.

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