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Profession · Teachers · 2026/27

UK tax for teachers (2026/27)

UK teachers benefit from one of the best public-service pension schemes (Teachers' Pension Scheme, CARE), but face specific tax considerations: how tutoring income is taxed, what professional expenses are deductible, how TLR (Teaching and Learning Responsibility) payments interact with the higher-rate band, and how summer pay treatment differs between academies and LA-maintained schools.

5-minute read

Teacher tax in one paragraph: UK teachers pay PAYE through their school's payroll on basic salary plus allowances (TLR, SEN, recruitment & retention). The Teachers' Pension Scheme deducts 7.4-11.7% from gross pay at source. Private tutoring income above £1,000 trading allowance must be declared via Self Assessment. Union subscriptions (NEU, NASUWT, NAHT, etc.) are deductible. Common claim points: professional subscriptions, course costs to maintain qualifications, home office for marking. McCloud remedy applies to TPS like other public-service schemes.

Teachers' Pension Scheme contributions

Teachers' Pension contributions are tiered by salary, 2026/27 bands:

Annual salary 2026/27Member rate
Up to £34,2897.4%
£34,290 - £46,1588.6%
£46,159 - £54,7299.6%
£54,730 - £72,53410.2%
£72,535 - £98,90811.3%
Over £98,90811.7%

Pension contribution is taken pre-tax so the net cost is around 70-75% of the gross rate for basic-rate payers. The scheme accrues at 1/57th of pensionable pay per year in the CARE element.

The "career average" benefit accrual

Since April 2015 (or April 2022 for protected pre-2015 members under McCloud remedy), Teachers' Pension is CARE (Career Average Revalued Earnings):

For a teacher working 35 years at an average pensionable salary of £40,000, the accrued pension ≈ £24,560 per year — payable from State Pension Age. For most teachers, this dwarfs any private SIPP you could realistically build.

Private tutoring income

If you tutor privately, the income is self-employment income subject to:

Common pitfall: teachers think tutoring "doesn't count" if paid in cash. HMRC's view: all UK trading income is taxable, regardless of payment method. The trading allowance is the threshold — not the tax-free zone.

Allowances — TLR, SEN, R&R

UK teachers receive several pensionable and non-pensionable allowances:

The risk: a teacher on £45,000 basic + £8,000 TLR1 + £5,000 SEN allowance is on £58,000 — well into higher-rate. Many teachers in promoted roles don't realise they've crossed the threshold.

Deductible expenses for teachers

ExpenseTypicalNotes
NEU / NASUWT / NAHT subscription£150-£250/yearDeductible via Self Assessment or P87
Subject association membership£40-£100If on HMRC List 3
NPQ (Headship / Senior Leadership)£2,000+ if self-fundedDeductible to maintain skills
DBS update service subscription£13/yearIf required for current role
Home office / marking flat rate£312/year£6/week simplified, if home is workplace for part-time work
Mileage between schools (multi-site)VariesAMAP rates
Specialist equipmentVariesIf solely for work use

Critical: classroom supplies you've personally paid for (resources, decorations) are usually NOT deductible because the school could have provided them — they fail the "wholly, exclusively and necessarily" test.

Summer pay — academies vs LA-maintained

How summer holiday pay is treated varies:

The tax treatment is the same — annual income is annual income — but cash flow varies. Use our tax calculator with annual salary to model regardless of payment frequency.

Worked example: HoD with TLR and tutoring

Ms B is a head of department on £52,000 + £6,000 TLR1 = £58,000 pay. She tutors privately for £3,500/year.

Common teacher tax mistakes

Sources

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