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UK tax code · 2026/27

Why is my tax code W1, M1 or X?

If your payslip shows a tax code ending in W1, M1 or X — sometimes shown after a number like 1257L W1 — you're on emergency tax. PAYE is calculating tax on a non-cumulative basis. The code usually self-corrects within a few pay periods, but understanding what's happening helps you spot if anything goes wrong.

5-minute read

W1, M1 and X are emergency tax-code suffixes. They tell PAYE to treat each pay period in isolation instead of looking at year-to-date earnings. W1 = weekly pay, M1 = monthly pay, X = non-standard pay period. Usually applied when starting a new job without a P45. The code is temporary and auto-corrects within 1-3 pay periods once HMRC has your full details.

How emergency codes differ from normal codes

Normal PAYE is cumulative. It looks at your total earnings since 6 April, calculates total tax due, and adjusts each pay period to make sure the right amount has been paid year-to-date.

Emergency W1/M1/X codes are non-cumulative. They just look at this pay period in isolation, apply the Personal Allowance for one period (e.g. £12,570 ÷ 12 = £1,047.50 for monthly), and tax the rest at the standard bands.

ComparisonNormal 1257LEmergency 1257L W1/M1
Look at year-to-date earnings?Yes — cumulativeNo — only this period
Self-corrects across the year?YesNo — needs HMRC action
Refund overpaid tax automatically?Yes (within tax year)No (only after correction)
PA applied?Full £12,570 spread evenly£1,047.50/month (one period’s slice)
What W1, M1 and X each meanW1 = weekly pay frequency, M1 = monthly, X = irregular or non-standard (e.g. 4-weekly, fortnightly). They’re functionally identical — just labelled differently to match how often you’re paid.

Common reasons you're on emergency tax

  1. You started a new job without giving your P45 to the new employer. The most common reason. HMRC defaults to W1/M1 until they receive details from the new employer.
  2. You started a first-ever job. No P45 exists. The Starter Checklist establishes your tax position; until processed, emergency code applies.
  3. You took your first pension. Pension providers use emergency M1 on the first payment because they have no record of your other income.
  4. You drew a lump sum from a pension. The first taxable lump sum (above 25% tax-free) is taxed using emergency M1 — meaning a £20,000 withdrawal could see ~£8,000 of tax deducted instead of the actual £4,000-£5,000 owed.
  5. You returned to UK from working abroad. HMRC doesn’t know your UK tax position immediately.

Worked example — first £30k payslip on emergency code

You start a new £30,000/yr job mid-tax-year (October). First monthly payslip:

1257L cumulative (correct)1257L M1 (emergency)
Gross this month£2,500£2,500
YTD earnings considered?Yes (£15k from previous job + £2.5k now = £17.5k)No (just £2,500)
PA used in this period£1,047.50 (cumulative catch-up)£1,047.50 (this period only)
Income tax this period~£290~£290
DifferenceIn this specific case, almost none

The emergency code usually doesn’t over-tax simple cases. It only causes problems when:

Pension lump sums — where emergency tax really hurts

The single biggest pain point for emergency tax codes is pension lump sums. Take this scenario:

You’re 60 and have a £100,000 pension pot. You take £25,000 tax-free (25% PCLS), plus another £20,000 taxable as a lump sum. The provider taxes the £20,000 using emergency M1.

Emergency M1Correct calculation
Pension provider treats it as...As if you earn £20k × 12 = £240,000/yrJust this one £20,000 payment
PA in M1 period£1,047.50Full £12,570 (if no other income)
Tax calculated~£8,030 (45% slabs apply)~£1,486 (just basic rate on £7,430)
Net received£11,970£18,514
HMRC refund due£6,544 — reclaimed via P55 form (or year-end P800)

The emergency tax refund checker walks through the reclaim. Use form P55 (income flexibly accessed) at gov.uk for fastest refund.

How emergency codes self-correct

For new employments — usually automaticOnce your employer files the Full Payment Submission (FPS) to HMRC at the end of the first pay period, HMRC matches your record. Within 1-2 pay periods, HMRC issues a proper cumulative code (e.g. 1257L without W1/M1). The next payslip catches up overpaid tax via cumulative reconciliation.
For pension lump sums — usually requires P55Pension providers can’t self-correct because there’s no future pay period. You must claim using form P55 (or P50Z if you’ve taken the whole pot, or P53Z if you’re continuing to draw down). HMRC refunds within 30 days typically.
For persistent emergency codes — phone HMRCIf your code shows W1/M1 for more than 3 pay periods, phone HMRC on 0300 200 3300 with your NI number and last payslip. They can issue a corrected code directly to your employer.

Claim back emergency tax fast

The emergency tax refund checker shows the right form (P55, P50Z, P53Z or P800) and the timeline for getting your refund from HMRC.

Open the refund checker →

Other UK tax codes explained

Sources and methodology

Emergency code rules from gov.uk/tax-codes/emergency-tax-codes. P55, P50Z, P53Z forms at gov.uk. Starter Checklist at gov.uk/government/publications/paye-starter-checklist.

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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