18 May 2026 · 8 min read

Written and reviewed by James Whitfield · Updated for 2026/27 · Editorial standards · Methodology

Freelancer vs Employee, Net Pay Comparison in the UK

Compare take-home pay for self-employed vs PAYE employment at the same gross income, including NI differences and hidden costs.

Who this guide helps

  • UK employees comparing salary scenarios
  • People planning monthly take-home pay and deductions
  • Readers who want a practical explanation before using the calculator

What this guide covers

  1. Where the tax treatment actually differs
  2. Benefits that employment provides but self-employment does not
  3. Making a like-for-like comparison

At-a-glance examples (2026/27)

Typical default outputs for quick context.

Gross salaryNet monthlyNet annualOpen
£30,000 £2,093.30 £25,119.60 View page
£50,000 £3,293.30 £39,519.60 View page
£100,000 £5,713.12 £68,557.40 View page

Where the tax treatment actually differs

Employees and self-employed freelancers both pay income tax at the same rates (20%, 40%, 45%) on their income above the personal allowance. The meaningful difference is National Insurance. Employees pay Class 1 NI at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270 and 2% above that. Self-employed people pay Class 4 NI at 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270 and 2% above that, a lower rate. They also pay Class 2 NI at £3.45/week if profits exceed £12,570, though Class 2 has been abolished for many purposes and the picture is evolving.

On a £50,000 gross income: a PAYE employee pays roughly £4,991 in NI. A sole trader on the same gross profit pays Class 4 NI of approximately £2,262 plus Class 2 of £179, a total of around £2,441. That is roughly £2,550 less NI per year, or £212/month more in the self-employed person's pocket, all else equal.

Income tax is the same for both on the same gross income figure, the NI gap is the main structural difference. However, a sole trader's 'gross income' is profit after allowable expenses, which can legitimately include home office costs, equipment, professional subscriptions and business-related travel. An employee cannot deduct these before tax. A freelancer turning over £55,000 with £5,000 of allowable business expenses effectively has a gross taxable profit of £50,000, whereas an employee on the same take-home would need a gross salary somewhat higher.

Benefits that employment provides but self-employment does not

The NI saving understates the true cost difference between employment and self-employment because employment comes with benefits that have real financial value. Statutory sick pay (£116.75/week, up to 28 weeks), Statutory Maternity Pay (90% of salary for 6 weeks, then flat rate for 33 weeks), holiday pay, and employer pension contributions are all statutory rights for employees that self-employed people must fund entirely themselves.

Auto-enrolment means a PAYE employee on £35,000 receives employer pension contributions of at least 3% of qualifying earnings, roughly £869/year (3% of £35,000 − £6,240). Over a 30-year career, that compounds into a material retirement benefit entirely absent from the self-employed comparison. A freelancer setting aside an equivalent amount from their own income gets the pension, but at a higher total cost.

Holiday entitlement is typically 28 days for full-time employees. Self-employed people can take as much holiday as they like, but there is no paid time off, every day not working is a day of lost income. At £50,000 annual profit from roughly 230 billable days, each day off costs around £217 in lost revenue. This is the largest hidden cost of freelancing and the one most often underestimated when comparing package values.

Making a like-for-like comparison

A fair comparison starts with gross income on both sides adjusted for expenses. If a PAYE job pays £55,000 and a freelance contract pays £55,000 gross revenue, the freelance income needs to cover VAT registration compliance (if above the £90,000 threshold, or even voluntarily), accountancy fees (£600–£1,500/year), professional indemnity insurance, and any equipment the employer would otherwise provide.

After expenses, apply the self-employed NI rates to the remaining profit. Then account for the value of the employee benefits you are forgoing. A rough rule of thumb is that a freelance day rate needs to be 30–40% higher than the equivalent full-time employed salary to produce the same after-costs, after-benefits economic position. For a salaried role paying £55,000 plus 5% employer pension, the equivalent freelance target is typically somewhere between £70,000 and £80,000 annual revenue.

This rule of thumb shifts based on your actual circumstances. If you have low business costs, no need for the statutory parental benefits, and plan to save aggressively into a SIPP anyway, the employment premium can be smaller. If you value the security of sick pay or you are planning a family, the gap is wider. Running the numbers specifically for your situation, income, costs, tax, benefits, is always more reliable than any generic multiplier.

Use the calculator for practical scenarios

2026/27 factual reference points

Current tax-year thresholds used across this guide and calculator.

NI thresholds

  • Primary threshold: £12,570
  • Upper earnings limit: £50,270
  • Rates: 8% then 2%

Student loan plans

  • PLAN1: threshold £26,900, rate 9%
  • PLAN2: threshold £29,385, rate 9%
  • PLAN4: threshold £33,795, rate 9%
  • PLAN5: threshold £25,000, rate 9%
  • Postgraduate: threshold £21,000, rate 6%

Guide FAQ

Can I test this guide topic in the calculator?

Yes. Use the scenario links in this guide to open prefilled states, then adjust salary, region, loan and pension settings.

Are these guide pages server-rendered for indexing?

Yes. Core content is rendered in HTML and linked to salary/city/tool pages for crawlable internal navigation.

Which assumptions are most important for accuracy?

Tax region, tax code, student loan plan, pension contribution and salary sacrifice are the key assumptions to check first.

Related guides

Sources