Self-Employed Tax on £140,000
Self-employed tax on £140,000 gross income in the 2026-27 tax year: you pay £48,753 in income tax, £179.4 Class 2 NI, and £4,036.6 Class 4 NI — totalling £52,969. Your take-home pay is £7,169.25 per month (£86,031 per year).
Self-employed income of £140,000 means no personal allowance (fully tapered above £125,140). Your take-home is £7,169.25 per month, with an effective tax rate of 38.1% and total deductions of £52,969.
How self-employed tax works
As a sole trader or self-employed person in the UK, you pay three types of tax on your profits:
- Income tax at the same rates as employed workers (20% basic, 40% higher, 45% additional)
- Class 2 National Insurance at £3.45 per week (£179.40 per year) if your profits exceed £12,570
- Class 4 National Insurance at 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% above £50,270
Expenses and the trading allowance
You can reduce your taxable profit by deducting allowable business expenses -- things like office supplies, travel, insurance, and professional services. Alternatively, if your expenses are low, you can use the £1,000 trading allowance instead. You can claim one or the other, not both.
On gross income of £140,000, your taxable profit is £139,000 (after the £1,000 trading allowance).
Payments on account
HMRC requires most self-employed people to make payments on account -- two advance payments towards your next year's tax bill. Each payment is 50% of your previous year's tax bill.
Based on a £52,969 tax bill, your payments on account would be:
- 31 January: £26,484.5 (plus any balancing payment for the previous year)
- 31 July: £26,484.5
Self-employed vs employed
If you earned £140,000 as an employee instead, you would pay:
- Income tax: £49,203 (same)
- NI (Class 1): £4,810.6 vs your Class 2 + 4 NI of £4,216
- Take-home: £85,986.4 (employed) vs £86,031 (self-employed)
Frequently asked questions
How much tax do I pay on £140,000 self-employed income?
You pay £48,753 in income tax, £179.4 Class 2 NI, and £4,036.6 Class 4 NI -- a total of £52,969.
When do I need to register as self-employed?
You must register with HMRC by 5 October in your second tax year of self-employment. For example, if you started self-employment in the 2025/26 tax year (after 6 April 2025), you must register by 5 October 2026.
What are the self-assessment deadlines?
- 31 October: Paper tax return deadline
- 31 January: Online tax return deadline and first payment on account
- 31 July: Second payment on account
Yes. You must keep records of all income and expenses for at least 5 years after the 31 January submission deadline. This includes invoices, bank statements, and receipts.
Do I need to register for VAT?
With turnover of £140,000, you are above the VAT registration threshold of £90,000. You must register for VAT if your taxable turnover exceeds this threshold in any 12-month period.
Your total self-employed income before expenses
Allowable business expenses (or use trading allowance if better)