National Insurance contributions
    
Employees and employers
The government  announced that it will increase the employer rate from 13.8% to 15% from 6  April 2025. The main rate of Class 1 employee National Insurance contributions  (NICs) is 8%.
The Secondary  Threshold is the point at which employers become liable to pay NICs on an  individual employee's earnings and is currently set at £9,100 a year. The  government will reduce the Secondary Threshold to £5,000 a year from 6 April  2025 until 6 April 2028 and then increase it by Consumer Price Index (CPI)  thereafter.
The Employment  Allowance currently allows businesses with employer NICs bills of £100,000 or  less in the previous tax year to deduct £5,000 from their employer NICs bill.  From 6 April 2025 the government will increase the Employment Allowance from  £5,000 to £10,500 and remove the £100,000 threshold for eligibility, expanding  this to all eligible employers with employer NIC bills.
Comment
For some    businesses, this will create a large additional NICs cost from April 2025. It    remains to be seen what the implications are for both the    economy and the job market.
The self-employed and NICs
From 6  April 2025 the rates of Class 4 self-employed NICs are 6% and 2%. For  Class 2 NICs from 6 April 2025:
    - Self-employed  people with profits of £6,845 and above get access to contributory benefits,  including the State Pension, through a National Insurance credit, without  paying Class 2 NICs.
- Those with  profits under £6,845 and others who pay Class 2 NICs voluntarily to get access  to contributory benefits including the State Pension will continue to be able  to do so.
For those  paying voluntarily, the government will also increase Class 2 and Class 3 NICs  to £3.50 and £17.75 respectively for 2025/26.