The short answer
For most UK higher-rate taxpayers, yes. Salary sacrifice gives you 42% relief on every pound (40% income tax + 2% NI) plus, in many cases, an additional 13.8% from employer NI savings the employer chooses to share with your pension. The total relief stack reaches 55%+ for some employers.
For basic-rate taxpayers, the relief is 28% (20% income tax + 8% NI), still better than relief-at-source's 25% gross-up, but the margin is narrower.
For people whose total household tax position differs from their salary tax position (high earners with reduced personal allowance, parents subject to HICBC, people in the 60% trap) the relief can be 60%+ — making salary sacrifice the highest-relief legal pension contribution in the UK system.
How salary sacrifice differs from "relief at source"
| Method | How it works | Relief stack |
|---|---|---|
| Salary sacrifice | You contractually give up part of salary; employer pays it directly into pension | Income tax + employee NI + (sometimes) employer NI |
| Relief at source (most personal pensions, SIPPs) | You pay net; provider claims back 20% from HMRC; you reclaim higher-rate via SA | Income tax only (no NI saving) |
| Net pay arrangement (some workplace pensions) | Employer deducts pre-tax from salary, no NI saving | Income tax only (no NI saving) |
The NI saving is what makes salary sacrifice the winner. On a £1,000 contribution from a higher-rate salary, salary sacrifice saves £420 of tax/NI vs £400 for relief at source. Not life-changing per pound, but compounds materially over decades.
Worked example — £75,000 salary, 5% sacrifice
Salary £75,000, sacrificing 5% (£3,750) per year into pension. Employer matches at 5% (£3,750) regardless of method.
- Salary sacrifice route. Take-home reduces by about £2,175 (£3,750 × 58% post-tax effective rate). Pension receives £3,750 from sacrifice + £3,750 employer match + (in many cases) £518 from employer NI saving shared = £8,018.
- Relief-at-source route. Take-home reduces by £3,000 (£3,750 net to provider). Provider claims 20% relief = £750 added, total £4,687.50 in pension. Employee then claims £750 back via SA. Pension receives £4,687.50 + £3,750 employer match = £8,437.50, but employee's net cost is £2,250 after the SA reclaim.
Comparable net cost (£2,175 vs £2,250) for comparable pension impact (£8,018 vs £8,437.50) — the relief-at-source route looks slightly better here, until you factor that the SA reclaim is a year-end refund (not in-month money) and that many employers share the full employer NI saving (which would push salary sacrifice ahead).
The salary sacrifice calculator shows the exact split for any salary, sacrifice level, and employer NI policy.
The three situations where salary sacrifice is wrong
- Sacrificing yourself below the National Living Wage. Illegal. Your gross post-sacrifice salary cannot be lower than NMW/NLW for your hours. Most modern payrolls block this automatically; some older systems don't.
- Sacrificing in the 12 months before a mortgage application. Lenders look at post-sacrifice salary. A £75k earner who sacrifices 10% looks like a £67.5k earner on the application. Unwind the sacrifice 12 months before applying, then reinstate after completion.
- Sacrificing while on (or about to claim) statutory benefits. SMP, SPP, Statutory Sick Pay are all calculated on post-sacrifice earnings. Pause salary sacrifice in the qualifying period for any benefit you're about to claim.
Two more situations to think carefully about:
- Approaching the pension Annual Allowance (£60,000) or tapered allowance. Excess contributions face a tax charge that wipes out the relief. The annual allowance calculator shows the limits.
- Already in defined-benefit pension at high accrual. The DB scheme accrual counts toward your annual allowance. Adding salary sacrifice on top can push you over without you noticing.
The "extra-relief" salary bands where sacrifice is exceptional
- £100,000–£125,140 (60% trap). Each £1 sacrificed avoids 60% effective tax (40% income tax + 20% via personal allowance taper). Single highest-relief band in the UK system. The 60% tax trap guide details the mechanics.
- HICBC band, £60,000–£80,000 with children. Each £1 sacrificed both reduces income tax (20–40%) and reduces the High Income Child Benefit Charge clawback (1% of family Child Benefit per £200 over £60k). For a family with 3 children and Child Benefit, the effective relief on a £1 sacrifice can reach 65%.
- Approaching the £100,000 free childcare cliff edge. Free childcare hours and Tax-Free Childcare both have £100,000 income cliff edges. Sacrificing back below £100,000 protects entire benefits worth £4,000–£12,000+ per year per child.
Sources
HMRC: Salary sacrifice and the effects on PAYE · Pension annual allowance. Educational only.