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Tax trap deep dive · 2026/27

Nursery-aged children: marginal rates up to 103%

The single worst UK tax trap isn’t for high earners with private jets — it's for parents of 3-4 year-olds in England. Between £100,000 and £125,140 of income, the combination of the 60% trap, HICBC clawback, tax-free childcare phase-out, and loss of 30 hours free childcare can push the effective marginal rate above 100%. Each extra £1 of pay leaves the household with less money.

6-minute read

For UK parents of 3-4 year-old children in England, the effective marginal tax rate between £100,000 and £125,140 of income can exceed 100% — peaking at ~103% for parents of two nursery-aged children. The drivers: Personal Allowance taper (62%), HICBC clawback (up to 11% for 2 kids), and the loss of Tax-Free Childcare (~£2,000/yr per child) plus 30 hours free childcare (worth £6,000-£10,000/yr per child) when ANI crosses £100,000. Each extra £1 of pay in this band can leave the household worse off.

The four stacking traps

Between £100,000 and £125,140 of adjusted net income, FOUR things bite simultaneously for parents of nursery-aged children:

  1. 60% tax trap. Income tax marginal rate jumps to 60% (40% IT + PA taper effect of 20%). Plus 2% NI = 62%.
  2. HICBC clawback. If between £60k-£80k ANI (this band may not apply here if income is already £100k+). At £100k+, Child Benefit is already fully clawed back.
  3. Tax-Free Childcare (TFC) loss. The government tops up 20p per £1 of childcare costs, capped at £2,000/yr per child under 12 (£4,000 if disabled). Lost ENTIRELY at £100,000 ANI — no taper, hard cliff.
  4. 30 hours free childcare loss. England parents of 3-4 year-olds get 30 free hours of childcare per week during term-time (38 weeks). This is worth roughly £4,500-£7,500/yr per child in London nurseries. Lost entirely at £100,000 ANI — hard cliff.

The fourth is the killer. The £100,000 cliff for TFC and 30 hours childcare means that crossing it can cost a parent £8,000-£17,500/yr per nursery-aged child immediately.

The 103% peak — worked example

Scenario: London parent, 2 nursery-aged children, full 30-hour funding used

At £100,000 ANI:

  • 30 hours free childcare: 2 children × £6,000/yr = £12,000/yr value
  • Tax-Free Childcare top-up: 2 children × £2,000/yr = £4,000/yr value
  • Total childcare benefits: £16,000/yr

At £100,001 ANI: Both benefits lost. Household loses £16,000/yr immediately.

Effective marginal rate on the £1 that crossed the threshold:

£1 of extra gross pay+£1.00
Income tax at 60% (PA taper)−£0.60
NI at 2%−£0.02
Net pay change from £1+£0.38
Lost childcare benefits−£16,000
Net household effect of £1 over threshold−£15,999.62

One pound of additional gross pay costs the household ~£16,000. The threshold-cliff effect dwarfs the per-pound marginal rate.

Averaged marginal rate over £100k-£125,140 band, including the £16,000 cliff loss:

  • Income across band: £25,140
  • Take-home (at 62% marginal): £9,553
  • Minus £16,000 cliff loss: −£6,447
  • Effective marginal rate over band: 125.7% — every extra £1 of pay costs ~£0.26 of household cash

When does the trap apply most severely?

The trap is most acute when:

For UK-wide perspective, the trap is moderated outside England because:

The defensive playbook

Strategy 1: Pension salary sacrifice into the bandThis is the dominant defence. Sacrificing pre-tax salary reduces ANI. A £125,000 earner sacrificing £25,000 to pension reduces ANI to £100,000 — restoring full TFC, 30 hours free childcare, AND the full Personal Allowance. The effective relief rate on this £25,000 contribution is around 78% combined: 40% IT + 20% PA taper recovered + 2% NI + (childcare cliff value spread). The £25,000 sacrificed costs only ~£5,500 of household cash.
Strategy 2: Gift Aid donationsGift Aid reduces ANI £-for-£ at the grossed-up amount. £1,000 Gift Aid donation = £1,250 ANI reduction. For parents close to the cliff, even small donations can move ANI across the threshold and unlock the childcare benefits.
Strategy 3: Use carry-forward to absorb large bonusesIf a December bonus would push ANI from £95k to £130k, look at unused pension AA from prior 3 years. The carry-forward can fund a much larger one-time pension contribution to bring ANI back below £100k.
Strategy 4: Time the start of childcare to manage thresholdsIf a partner is returning from parental leave and the family income is on the cusp, delaying nursery start until the new tax year (or accelerating it for tax-loss reasons) can change which year the cliff applies. Complex — depends on individual circumstances.
Strategy 5: Defer income across tax years if possibleSome employers will defer bonus payment from March to April (or vice versa). Smoothing income across two tax years can keep each year below £100k. Only viable if the employer cooperates.

The political context

The £100,000 cliff for Tax-Free Childcare and 30 hours free childcare has been repeatedly criticised by economists, the Office for Tax Simplification, and parenting bodies as one of the worst-designed UK tax-and-benefit interactions. The 2024 Autumn Statement and 2025 Spring Statement made no changes to the threshold despite consistent lobbying.

The OBR projects that ~60,000 UK parents annually face this 100%+ marginal rate, with the number growing as inflation pulls more parents toward the frozen £100k threshold. Until reformed, salary sacrifice is the only legitimate defence.

One more considerationThe childcare benefits are checked each quarter against estimated income. If your January-March ANI is above £100k, you lose the benefits for that quarter regardless of full-year ANI. This adds timing complexity that the rest of the tax system doesn’t share.

Plan around the £100k cliff

The adjusted net income calculator handles all components: salary, sacrifice, Gift Aid, dividends, pension. Use it to model exactly what your ANI will be.

Open the ANI calculator →

Sources and methodology

Tax-Free Childcare income limit from gov.uk/tax-free-childcare. 30 hours free childcare England from gov.uk/30-hours-free-childcare. Personal Allowance taper from gov.uk/income-tax-rates. OBR commentary on the marginal-rate cliff from obr.uk publications.

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.

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