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National Insurance cut to kick in but more pay tax

Workers will see their National Insurance (NI) payments cut from Saturday but frozen thresholds mean many are paying more in income tax. The NI rate is falling from 10% to 8% for 27 million employees across the UK – the second such cut this year.

It is worth about £450 a year to an employee on an average salary of £35,000. But a freeze in income levels at which tax is paid until 2028 will leave many with a higher income tax bill.

Many benefits are rising in line with prices, and the state pension is also set to increase. But this comes after a slew of household bills became more expensive at the start of the month. So, the financial impact can differ significantly – depending on whether people work, how much they earn, and other personal circumstances.

A fixed percentage of the money people earn from their wages is deducted in NI.

Since 6 January, millions of employees have been paying 10% on their earnings between £12,571 and £50,270. They previously paid 12%. From Saturday, they will be paying 8%.

Source: BBC

In other news – William Wragg: Tory gave MPs’ numbers to dating app contact, report says

senior Tory has told the Times he gave the personal numbers of fellow MPs to someone he met on a dating app. William Wragg told the paper he shared the contacts, adding he was “scared” the individual had “compromising things on me”.

William Wragg

He apologised and said he had “hurt people by being weak”. It comes amid reports that at least 12 men in Westminster have received unsolicited texts and naked pictures. Read more

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