Changes to employee perks including salary sacrifice and benefits in kind could be announced next week - Daily Record
Changes to employee perks including salary sacrifice and benefits in kind could be announced next week - Daily Record"
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Changes to employee perks including salary sacrifice and benefits in kind could be announced next weekNew HMRC surveys suggest valuable employment perks could be under threat.LifestyleLinda
Howard Money and Consumer Writer11:56, 04 Jun 2025Income tax rises for Scots in April - how the changes affect you Two new surveys published by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) indicate that
valuable employment perks such as salary sacrifice pension schemes and Benefit in Kind arrangements could be in Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ crosshairs ahead of the Autumn Budget, possibly at
the Spending Review on June 11.
The first survey, ‘Understanding the attitudes and behaviours of employers towards salary sacrifice for pensions’, examined a number of hypothetical scenarios to test the reaction of
employers to possible changes to salary sacrifice schemes for pensions.
Under such schemes, employees give up a portion of their salary which the employer pays instead into their pension as an enhanced pension contribution.
READ MORE: HMRC confirms new change to income tax to start next yearREAD MORE: Thousands of people in work to receive back payments from their employer This arrangement results in employer
and employee National Insurance Contributions (NIC) savings, as the amount of salary sacrificed and corresponding employer pension contributions are exempt from both income tax and NIC.
Scenario one in the study removed the NIC exemption for employers and employees, resulting in employer and employee NIC charges on the salary that the employee sacrificed.
Scenario two removed both the NIC exemption for employers and employees and the income tax exemption for employees, on the salary sacrificed. Scenario three removed the NIC exemption but
only on salary sacrificed above a £2,000 per year threshold.
Article continues below While employers noted that all three scenarios would likely affect employee morale, they felt that scenario three would be the easiest to ‘sell’ as there would be a
greater understanding from employees as to why it was introduced.
A further survey, ‘Research with employers on Benefits in Kind and expenses', looked at the prevalence among employers of offering Benefits in Kind to employees.
That survey found that these were more common among medium and large employers, the most common in this group being workplace parking (39%), company cars (29%) and cycle to work schemes
(23%). Around a quarter of medium and large employers said they offered Benefits in Kind through salary sacrifice arrangements (26%).
UK Government Updates Winter Fuel Payment update due in JuneHMRC confirms change to tax next yearState Pension age rises to 67 next yearDWP welfare reforms could be 'tweaked' Caroline
Harwood, head of employment tax at accountancy and business advisory firm BDO said: “You can understand why the Chancellor might be interested in reviewing the tax reliefs for pensions
salary sacrifice schemes.
“The most recent figures show that the cost of NIC tax reliefs from contributions to, and benefits from, registered pension schemes reached £23.5 billion in 2023/24. Meanwhile the cost of
Income Tax relief for registered pension schemes reached £28.5bn in the same period.
“Previous chancellors have shied away from taking this ‘low hanging fruit’ because of the furore that changes to pensions tax causes - and because saving for retirement has generally been
seen as something to encourage.
“One subtle way the Chancellor could feasibly seek to cut some of this cost would be by limiting the NIC exemption to say £2,000 to £5,000 of total salary sacrificed for all benefit types -
after all the self-employed cannot benefit from this perk. However, such a change would still be unpopular and reduce incentives for employers to offer salary sacrifice schemes and for
employees to make suitable provision for their retirement.
“It would also add new burdens on employers who would have to calculate the excess if people went over the threshold.”
Latest Personal Finance NewsCheck for £70 Mastercard payoutChanges to income tax to start in 2026Four banks offer up to £175 to switchEarn £100 an hour listening to music Ms Harwood added:
“Employees currently using Benefit in Kind incentives through salary sacrifice schemes could also lose out if the current incentives were reduced. This could have a particularly big impact
on those taking advantage of such schemes to lease Electric Vehicles - another arrangement previously encouraged in the context of the path to Net Zero.”
Salary sacrifice allows employees to exchange part of their salary for non-cash benefits, such as pension contributions, in a tax-efficient manner. These contributions are exempt from income
tax and NICs, making them attractive and more affordable for both employers and employees.
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