In UK redundancy 2026/27: the first £30,000 of redundancy payment is tax-free (income tax and NI). Statutory redundancy pay is 0.5 weeks pay per year of service under age 22, 1 week per year 22-41, 1.5 weeks per year 41+, capped at 20 years and £700/week (April 2024). Settlement agreements can boost payment significantly. Tax-free amount applies only to genuine redundancy, not notice pay or holiday pay. Pension contributions can shelter additional amounts. Universal Credit typically starts within 5 weeks. Don’t accept the first offer - settlement agreements are routinely negotiated upward.
The £30,000 tax-free rule explained
Redundancy payment - what is and isn’t tax-free 2026/27
Key point: the £30,000 tax-free rule applies only to genuine redundancy compensation, not to:
- Notice pay (whether worked or paid in lieu) - taxed as normal salary
- Holiday pay accrued but unused - taxed as normal salary
- Contractual PILON (Payment in Lieu of Notice) - taxed as normal salary since 2018 reforms
- Bonus accrued but not yet paid - taxed as normal salary
- Restrictive covenant payments - taxed as normal income
Only the "ex gratia" or "statutory redundancy" element is tax-free under the £30,000 rule. Good settlement agreements split the total payment to maximise the tax-free portion within HMRC limits.
Statutory redundancy pay 2026/27
By law, if you’ve been continuously employed for 2+ years, you’re entitled to statutory redundancy pay:
| Age at redundancy | Pay per year of service (within band) |
|---|---|
| Under 22 | 0.5 weeks pay |
| 22-40 | 1 week pay |
| 41+ | 1.5 weeks pay |
Caps: maximum 20 years service; maximum weekly pay £700 (2026/27, up from £643 in 2024). Maximum statutory redundancy pay therefore £700 × 1.5 × 20 = £21,000.
Worked example: 45-year-old with 15 years service, earning £45,000
- Statutory weekly pay: £45,000 / 52 = £865/week, capped at £700/week
- Years 22-40 (in this case 22-40 = 18 years technically, but only first 15 of service): 18-15 = 3 years to age 40 at 1 week × £700 = £2,100. Wait - they’re 45 so all 15 years count toward 1.5 weeks/year
- Actually: years served between ages 22-40 = 4 years (45-15=30 yo when started, but joined post-22) so… requires careful date calculation
- Realistic figure: 15 × 1.5 × £700 = £15,750 (approximating all service at 41+ rate)
Many employers pay above statutory - particularly for senior staff, in restructurings, or under collective consultation agreements.
The 30-day action plan
What to negotiate in the settlement agreement
Benefits to claim
- Universal Credit - replaces JSA for most people. Apply within first 30 days. First payment ~5 weeks after application.
- Council Tax Reduction - apply via local council. Income-tested.
- Mortgage Interest Support - now a loan rather than benefit (introduced 2018). Available after 39 weeks of claim.
- Free school meals / Healthy Start vouchers - check eligibility once income drops.
- Pension Credit - if state pension age or above and income low.
Common redundancy financial mistakes
Calculate your redundancy tax position
The redundancy pay tax calculator shows what you keep after tax on different settlement structures, including the £30,000 tax-free element.
Open the redundancy tax calculatorSources and references
Statutory redundancy from gov.uk redundancy rights. £30,000 tax-free framework from gov.uk income tax termination payments. Settlement agreements from gov.uk settlement agreements and tax. Universal Credit from gov.uk Universal Credit.
UK Tax Drag is educational and not regulated financial, tax, legal or family advice - see the disclaimer for the full position. For decisions with material legal or family consequences (divorce, probate, separation), specialist advice from a solicitor and/or financial adviser is strongly recommended.
Other UK life-event money guides
- Getting married - UK money guide
- Having your first baby - UK money guide
- Divorce finances - UK Q&A
- Redundancy - first 30 days financial response
- Probate and Inheritance Tax
- Buying a home with parents' help
- University funding - parents' guide
- Cohabitation finances - UK
- Career break / sabbatical financial planning
- The year you retire - operational guide
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