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reference · 12 min read

Financial & Tax Glossary: 50+ Terms Explained

By: CalculatorZone editorsPublished: 1 February 2025Updated: 18 February 2026

Plain-English definitions for the UK financial and tax terms that turn up most often in calculators, payslips, mortgage documents and government notices.

A

AER (Annual Equivalent Rate)
The interest rate a savings account pays once compounding is annualised. Lets you compare products fairly regardless of how often they pay interest.
Allowable expense
A cost incurred "wholly and exclusively" for your business — deductible from trading profit before tax.
Amortisation
The mathematical process by which a loan’s balance is gradually reduced through fixed monthly payments that cover both principal and interest.
APR (Annual Percentage Rate)
The total cost of borrowing expressed as a yearly rate — includes interest plus mandatory fees. Makes comparing loans apples-to-apples.
Annual Allowance (pension)
The maximum you can pay into pensions each tax year while still getting tax relief. £60,000 in 2025/26, tapered down for high earners.

B

Basic-rate taxpayer
Someone whose taxable income, after the Personal Allowance, falls in the basic-rate band (up to £50,270 in 2025/26 England/Wales/NI).
BTL (Buy-to-Let)
A residential property bought primarily to rent out. BTL mortgages have higher rates, stricter underwriting, and attract the +5% SDLT surcharge.

C

Carry-forward
Unused pension Annual Allowance from the previous 3 tax years can be used in the current year — up to £180,000 of extra headroom on top of this year’s £60k.
CGT (Capital Gains Tax)
Tax on the profit when you sell an asset worth more than you paid. 18%/24% on all asset types since 30 October 2024 (shares, crypto, and residential property excluding your main home). Business Asset Disposal Relief is 14%. £3,000 annual exempt amount in 2025/26.
Class 1 NI
Employee National Insurance, deducted through PAYE. 8% main rate on earnings £12,570–£50,270, 2% above.
Class 4 NI
Self-employed National Insurance on profits. 6% main, 2% above £50,270. Paid through Self Assessment.
Completion (property)
The day ownership transfers and funds flow to the seller. Your keys date. SDLT is due within 14 days.
Compound interest
Interest earned on both the original principal and previously-accumulated interest. Drives long-term investment growth exponentially.
Corporation Tax
Tax on UK company profits. 19% small-profits rate (≤£50k), 25% main (≥£250k), marginal relief in between.

D

Deposit (mortgage)
The cash portion of a property purchase. The rest comes from the mortgage. Expressed as a percentage (10% deposit = 90% LTV).
Dividend Allowance
The first £500 of dividend income is tax-free in 2025/26 (down from £1,000 previously).
Dividend tax
Tax on dividends above the Dividend Allowance. 8.75% (basic), 33.75% (higher), 39.35% (additional).
Drawdown (pension)
Leaving your pension pot invested while drawing income from it, as opposed to buying an annuity. Income sustainability depends on withdrawal rate and market performance.

E

Effective rate
Your blended average tax rate across all bands — always lower than your marginal rate except for basic-rate-only earners.
Equity (property)
The portion of a property you own outright. Property value minus outstanding mortgage = your equity.

F

FTB (First-Time Buyer)
Someone who has never owned a residential property anywhere in the world. Qualifies for SDLT relief up to £500,000 in 2025/26.

G

Gross income
Income before tax and deductions. What your employer pays into the payroll system. Net is what arrives in your bank.

H

Higher-rate taxpayer
Someone whose income above the Personal Allowance exceeds £50,270 (2025/26) — pays 40% on income in the higher-rate band.
HMRC
His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs — the UK tax authority. Administers Income Tax, NI, VAT, Corporation Tax, SDLT and most other central taxes.

I

IHT (Inheritance Tax)
Tax charged at 40% on estate value above £325,000 (plus £175,000 Residence Nil-Rate Band in qualifying cases). Charity donations ≥10% drop the rate to 36%.
Interest-only mortgage
Monthly payments cover only the interest — the principal stays flat and must be repaid at the end of the term. Common in BTL, restricted in residential.
IR35
UK off-payroll working rules. Determines if a contractor working through a limited company is really a "disguised employee". Inside-IR35 means PAYE tax and employee NI.
ISA (Individual Savings Account)
UK tax wrapper. Up to £20,000 per tax year. Growth + income inside are completely tax-free.

L

LISA (Lifetime ISA)
Under-40s save up to £4,000/year for a first home (≤£450k) or retirement (from 60). Government adds 25% bonus. 25% penalty on non-qualifying withdrawal.
LTV (Loan-to-Value)
Mortgage size ÷ property value. 85% LTV = 15% deposit. Lower LTV = better rates.

M

Marginal rate
The tax rate on your next £1 of income. Always higher than your effective rate for multi-band earners.

N

NI (National Insurance)
Mandatory contributions that fund the state pension, NHS, and some benefits. Similar to a second income tax but with different thresholds.
Nil-rate band
The zero-rate portion of a tax. For IHT, £325,000. For SDLT, £125,000 (main home).

O

Overpayment (mortgage)
Paying more than the contractual monthly repayment. Reduces principal faster, saving future interest. Most UK lenders allow 10%/year penalty-free.

P

PAYE (Pay As You Earn)
The mechanism by which employers deduct Income Tax and NI from wages each month and remit to HMRC — so most employees never file a tax return.
Payments on Account
Pre-payments towards your next Self Assessment bill — paid 31 January and 31 July. Each is 50% of last year’s total tax.
Personal Allowance
The portion of income you can earn before paying Income Tax. £12,570 in 2025/26. Tapers to zero between £100k and £125,140.
Principal
The amount borrowed (or the amount still owed, after repayments). Distinct from the interest you pay to borrow it.

R

Remortgage
Replacing your existing mortgage with a new one, typically at the end of a fixed-rate period. You can switch lender or stay — shopping around usually beats a "product transfer".

S

SDLT (Stamp Duty Land Tax)
Tax paid when buying property in England or Northern Ireland. Tiered by price band.
Self Assessment
UK tax return process for anyone whose tax isn’t fully collected via PAYE — self-employed, landlords, high-income individuals, investors with complex positions.
SIPP (Self-Invested Personal Pension)
A pension where you choose the investments yourself, typically through an online platform. Same tax relief as any pension.
Stocks & Shares ISA
ISA wrapper for investments — shares, funds, ETFs, bonds. All growth and dividends tax-free.
Surcharge (stamp duty)
Extra 5% SDLT on additional residential property. An extra 2% applies to non-UK residents. Can stack.

T

Tax year
The UK tax year runs from 6 April to 5 April the following year. 2025/26 = 6 April 2025 to 5 April 2026.
Taper
A phased reduction of an allowance. Used for the Personal Allowance (£100k+ income) and pension AA (£260k+ income).

U

UEL (Upper Earnings Limit)
Annual earnings threshold above which employee NI drops from 8% to 2%. £50,270 in 2025/26 — coincidentally matching the Income Tax higher-rate threshold.

V

VAT (Value Added Tax)
Consumption tax added to most UK goods and services. Standard rate 20%, reduced 5%, zero on essentials. Businesses must register if turnover exceeds £90,000.

Y

Yield (rental)
Annual rent as a percentage of property value. Gross yield uses asking rent only; net yield subtracts ongoing costs (insurance, maintenance, management).