£20,000 UK Personal Allowance In 2025 - How Much More Will You Keep?
UK

£20,000 UK Personal Allowance In 2025 – How Much More Will You Keep?

The Personal Allowance is the income you can earn each tax year before Income Tax applies. For 2025/26, the official Personal Allowance remains £12,570. A rise to £20,000 has been discussed publicly, but it is not confirmed in law.

This article gives you a real-world snapshot of what’s official now and a clear, worked example of how much you’d keep if the allowance were raised to £20,000—so you can plan smartly either way.

What’s official for 2025/26 (right now)

  • Personal Allowance: £12,570
  • Income Tax rates (rUK): 20% basic40% higher45% additional (Scotland uses different bands, but the UK-wide Personal Allowance applies)
  • Allowance taper: Above £100,000 income, the allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2, reaching £0 at £125,140

If it rose to £20,000: how much more would you keep?

Moving from £12,570 → £20,000 adds £7,430 of tax-free income. For most basic-rate taxpayers, that’s a saving of 20% × £7,430 = £1,486 per year (about £124/month). Higher-rate and additional-rate taxpayers would still save on that first slice, subject to the taper above £100,000.

Illustrative savings table (Income Tax only)

Annual Gross IncomeTax-Free NowIf £20,000 PAExtra Tax-FreeTax Saved/Year
£18,000£12,570£18,000 (all)£5,430£1,086
£20,000£12,570£20,000 (all)£7,430£1,486
£30,000£12,570£20,000£7,430£1,486
£55,000£12,570£20,000£7,430£1,486
£110,000*TaperedTaperedVariesVaries

*Above £100,000, your Personal Allowance is tapered, so savings reduce as income rises.

Who would gain the most?

  • Low and middle earners: Clear, predictable saving of up to £1,486/year.
  • Part-time workers and those with multiple small incomes: More pay sits in the tax-free band.
  • Pensioners with modest private pensions: Less chance of paying Income Tax once combined income stays within the allowance.
  • Higher earners: Save on the first slice, but the allowance taper cuts benefits above £100,000.

PAYE vs Self Assessment — how it would show up

If a rise happened, HMRC would update PAYE tax codes automatically. You’d see a lower Income Tax deduction on your payslip soon after the change date. 

Self-employed people would feel the impact when filing Self Assessment for 2025/26. Until any legal change, pay and returns continue to assume £12,570.

Don’t forget National Insurance

National Insurance (NI) is separate from Income Tax, with its own thresholds and rates. A higher Personal Allowance doesn’t automatically change NI. Always check both lines on your payslip to understand the true take-home impact.

Practical planning tips

  • Budget the potential uplift: If your pay sits around £18k–£30k, the £1,486/year illustration shows what a change could mean for savingsdebt payoff, or energy bills.
  • Watch the taper: If you’re near £100,000, consider the allowance taper when planning bonuses or additional work.
  • Use calculators wisely: Run scenarios for both current rules and a £20,000 allowance to stress-test your budget.

Right now, the Personal Allowance is £12,570. If it rose to £20,000, many workers would keep up to £1,486/year more in take-home pay.

Until any legal change happens, plan based on current rules, keep an eye on tax-code updates, and review both Income Tax and National Insurance to understand your net position.

FAQs

Has the £20,000 Personal Allowance been confirmed for 2025/26?

No. The confirmed 2025/26 allowance is £12,570. A £20,000 figure has been discussed but is not in force.

How much would I save if it did become £20,000?

Most basic-rate taxpayers would keep about £1,486 more per year (roughly £124 per month). Actual amounts depend on your income and any taper.

Do Scottish taxpayers have a different Personal Allowance?

No. Scotland sets different rates/bands, but the Personal Allowance level is UK-wide.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *