A salary sacrifice should not reduce your cash pay to below the National Minimum
Wage.
The National Minimum Wage provides a legally binding minimum hourly rate of pay
to workers aged 18 years or over – with few exceptions. There are three levels
of minimum wage, and the rates from 1st October 2008 are:
- £5.73 per hour for workers aged 22 years and older
- A development rate of £4.77 per hour for workers aged 18 – 21 years inclusive
- £3.53 per hour which applies to all workers under the age of 18 who are no
longer of compulsary school age *.
* Compulsary School age:
In England and Wales: a person is no longer of compulsary school age after the
last Friday of June of the school year in which their 16th birthday occurs.
In Scotland: pupils whose 16th birthday falls between 1 March and 30 September
may not leave before the 31 May of that year. Pupils aged 16 on or between 1
October and the last day of February may not leave until the start of the
Christmas holidays in that school year.
In Northern Ireland: a person is no longer of compulsary school age after the
30th June of the school year in which their 16th birthday occurs.
How could a salary sacrifice affect my future entitlement to the State Pension,
benefits and tax credits?
A salary sacrifice may affect your entitlement to state benefits and tax credits
and you should carefully consider the possible effects before you decide to go
ahead with a change in your employment contract. The information that follows is
based on the rules that apply at the time of writing. These will be updated in
due course to reflect any changes from April 2003.
When you sacrifice cash pay in return for a benefit that is exempt from National
Insurance Contributions (NICs) – for example, childcare vouchers - you will not
pay NICs on the cost of providing the vouchers. Although this means that you
save NICs and can therefore get more vouchers than cash for the same cost to
your employer, it also:
- cuts the earnings on which you can pay NICs
- may take your earnings for which NICs are due below the lower earnings limit
(LEL), which is £90 per week for the tax year 2008/09
As your entitlement to some benefits is based on the amount of NICs that you pay,
and others on the amount of your earnings, entering into a salary sacrifice may
affect your current or future entitlement to a range of benefits. For most
employees paying less NICs may not adversely affect your benefit entitlement as
- you may still be paying enough NICs to qualify for benefits
- your earnings may still be between £90 and £105 a week (the LEL and the Primary
Threshold for tax year 2008/09), so that you are deemed to be paying NICs and
you can still build up benefit rights even though you are not actually paying
NICs
- you may already be earning below the LEL before the salary sacrifice
- if you only sacrifice salary for a short period, your contribution history will
only be affected for that period, so the effect on your benefit entitlement will
be minimal
If you earn between the annual LEL (£4770) and £11,600 you will be deemed to have
earned £11,600 for the purpose of the calculation of your State Second Pension
accrual. This is to provide a top-up to lower earners. It is important to note,
however, that not only will entitlement to the State Second Pension be affected
if your reduced earnings fall below the LEL, but it may also be affected if your
reduced earnings fall between £11,600 and the Upper Earnings Limit (currently
£31,720).
Entering into a salary sacrifice arrangement may also affect your entitlement to
Statutory Sick Pay, Statutory Maternity Pay, Statutory Paternity Pay, Statutory
Adoption Pay, the State Pension and any means-tested benefits or tax credits.
You should consider these effects before you decide whether
to enter into a salary sacrifice.