Self-Employed Tax on £80,000 in Scotland

Self-employed tax on £80,000 gross income in Scotland in the 2026-27 tax year: you pay £21,328.31 in income tax, £179.4 Class 2 NI, and £2,836.6 Class 4 NI — totalling £24,344.31. Your take-home pay is £4,554.64 per month (£54,655.69 per year).

Self-employed income of £80,000 in Scotland puts you in the higher-rate tax bracket. After income tax and National Insurance (Class 2 and Class 4), your take-home pay is £4,554.64 per month. Your effective tax rate is 30.8%, with a total tax bill of £24,344.31.

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 -- though Scotland has different rates)
  • 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
Unlike employed workers who pay Class 1 NI at 8%, self-employed Class 4 NI is only 6%. However, you don't get employer NI contributions towards your state pension entitlement in the same way.

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 £80,000, your taxable profit is £79,000 (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 £24,344.31 tax bill, your payments on account would be:

  • 31 January: £12,172.16 (plus any balancing payment for the previous year)
  • 31 July: £12,172.16
This means in your first year of self-employment, you may need to pay up to £48,688.63 (the full year's tax plus the first payment on account). Budget carefully for this.

Self-employed vs employed

If you earned £80,000 as an employee instead in Scotland, you would pay:

  • Income tax: £21,778.31 (same)
  • NI (Class 1): £3,610.6 vs your Class 2 + 4 NI of £3,016
  • Take-home: £54,611.09 (employed) vs £54,655.69 (self-employed)
As a self-employed person, you pay £594.6 less in National Insurance. However, employees also benefit from employer pension contributions and other workplace benefits. See the full employed take-home breakdown on £80,000.

Frequently asked questions

How much tax do I pay on £80,000 self-employed income?

You pay £21,328.31 in income tax, £179.4 Class 2 NI, and £2,836.6 Class 4 NI -- a total of £24,344.31.

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
Do I need to keep records?

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.

£

Your total self-employed income before expenses

£

Allowable business expenses (or use trading allowance if better)

Take-home pay

Monthly take-home£4,377.97
Weekly take-home£1,010.30
Annual take-home£52,536

Profit

Gross income£80,000
Business expenses-£5,000
Taxable profit£75,000

Income tax

Personal allowance£12,570
Income tax-£19,528.31
Starter rate (19%)-£438.14
Basic rate (20%)-£2,337.00
Intermediate rate (21%)-£3,591.21
Higher rate (42%)-£13,161.96

National Insurance

Class 2 NI-£179.40
Class 4 NI-£2,756.60
Total NI-£2,936.00

Summary

Total tax & NI-£22,464.31
Effective tax rate29.9%
Payment on account (Jan 31)£11,232.16
Payment on account (Jul 31)£11,232.16