Tax codes ending in M (e.g. 1383M) mean you have received the Marriage Allowance transfer — you get an extra £1,260 of PA. Codes ending in N (e.g. 1131N) mean you gave your spouse £1,260 of your PA. Net effect: £252/yr of income tax saving for the couple, claimed by the higher earner. Eligible only when one spouse earns under £12,570 and the other under £50,270.
How Marriage Allowance changes your tax code
The Marriage Allowance transfer is exactly £1,260 per year — 10% of the £12,570 Personal Allowance. The codes shift to reflect the change:
| Standard code | After Marriage Allowance transfer | |
|---|---|---|
| Recipient (higher earner) | 1257L (£12,570 tax-free) | 1383M (£13,830 tax-free) |
| Giver (lower earner) | 1257L (£12,570 tax-free) | 1131N (£11,310 tax-free) |
Net effect for the couple:
- Recipient saves 20% × £1,260 = £252 in income tax per year
- Giver pays slightly more tax only if their income exceeds £11,310 (which is below the standard £12,570)
- If the giver earns less than £11,310, the transfer is "free" — no tax impact on them
Who qualifies for Marriage Allowance
Both spouses (or civil partners) must meet all conditions:
- Married or in a civil partnership. Cohabiting couples don’t qualify.
- Lower earner has income under £12,570 (their unused PA is what gets transferred).
- Higher earner has income under £50,270 in England, Wales, Northern Ireland (or £43,662 in Scotland, the intermediate-rate threshold).
- Both spouses were born after 6 April 1935 (older couples may qualify for Married Couple’s Allowance instead, which is more valuable).
If the higher earner crosses into higher rate at £50,270, eligibility ends. The transfer auto-renews each year until one spouse signals a change.
When MA isn't worth it
The only cases where MA isn’t worth claiming:
- The lower earner’s income is between £11,310 and £12,570 — they actually owe some tax after the transfer (because £1,131 of their PA was transferred away). Net household saving may be tiny or zero.
- The higher earner is so close to the £50,270 higher-rate threshold that they expect to cross it within the year. Once in higher rate, MA is no longer available and the giver’s PA stays at £11,310 unnecessarily.
- You’re separated or divorced — MA only applies to couples living together (or briefly apart for work).
Worked example — couple with £8k + £40k income
Wife earns £8,000 (well under £12,570). Husband earns £40,000 (basic rate).
| Without Marriage Allowance | With Marriage Allowance | |
|---|---|---|
| Wife’s code | 1257L | 1131N |
| Wife’s tax | £0 | £0 (still under £11,310 PA) |
| Husband’s code | 1257L | 1383M |
| Husband’s tax | £5,486 | £5,234 |
| Household tax saving | £252 per year | |
£252 a year × backdated 4 years = potential £1,008 refund on first claim. The Marriage Allowance checker confirms eligibility.
How to claim or cancel Marriage Allowance
Check Marriage Allowance eligibility
The Marriage Allowance checker confirms whether you qualify based on both spouses’ income, including the 4-year backdate.
Open the MA checker →Other UK tax codes explained
- What is a UK tax code? — the overview
- Why is my tax code 1257L? (the standard code)
- Why is my tax code BR? (basic rate)
- Why is my tax code 0T?
- Why is my tax code D0? (40% flat)
- Why is my tax code D1? (45% flat)
- K-prefix tax codes — negative allowance
- W1, M1 and X — emergency tax codes
- Why is my tax code NT? (no tax)
- T-suffix tax codes
- M and N — Marriage Allowance codes
- Tax code changed suddenly — what to do
Sources and methodology
Marriage Allowance rules from gov.uk/marriage-allowance. Tax code letter explanation from gov.uk/tax-codes. How does Marriage Allowance work at gov.uk/marriage-allowance/how-it-works.
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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