Dividend tax applies when a UK company pays out profits to its shareholders. If you're a contractor paying yourself through your own limited company, or you hold shares outside of an ISA/pension, this is the rate that determines how much of your income you keep.
The £500 dividend allowance (2025/26)
The first £500 of dividend income each tax year is tax-free. This allowance has been cut dramatically — it was £5,000 in 2017/18, £2,000 up to 2022/23, £1,000 in 2023/24, and is now £500. It's the same for all taxpayers regardless of income.
Dividend tax rates
Above the £500 allowance, dividends are taxed at lower rates than salary — but only because salary also carries National Insurance. Total effective tax on dividends is often similar to total tax+NI on salary once corporation tax is included.
| Band | Income range (2025/26) | Dividend rate |
|---|---|---|
| Basic rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 8.75% |
| Higher rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 33.75% |
| Additional rate | Over £125,140 | 39.35% |
The band you fall into is determined by your total taxable income (salary + dividends + other), not just dividend income alone. Dividends are stacked on top of other income.
Directors — the salary + dividend mix
If you run your own limited company, the classic structure is to take a small salary (up to the NI primary threshold) and the rest as dividends. The maths has shifted as dividend allowances have shrunk and corporation tax has risen — it's still usually better than all-salary, but the margin is smaller than it used to be.
- Typical 2025/26 salary — around £12,570 (covered by Personal Allowance, uses some Class 1 NI but earns state pension credit).
- Corporation tax paid first — profits are reduced by 19–25% CT before any dividend can be declared.
- Dividends taxed personally — after the £500 allowance, at 8.75% / 33.75% / 39.35%.
- No NI on dividends — this is the entire reason the structure exists.
Reporting dividend income
Where you report dividends depends on how much you received:
- Under £10,000 — call HMRC or adjust your PAYE code. Self Assessment not required solely for this.
- £10,000 or more — you must register for Self Assessment and file a return by 31 January.
- Own-company dividends — always record via formal dividend vouchers and board minutes, even for a one-person Ltd. Paper trail matters if HMRC enquires.
Sheltering dividends
The most reliable way to pay zero UK tax on investment dividends is to hold the shares inside a tax wrapper:
- Stocks & Shares ISA — £20,000 annual subscription limit. Dividends inside are completely tax-free and don't need reporting.
- SIPP / workplace pension — dividends grow tax-free while inside, but withdrawals at retirement are taxed as income. Best for long-term growth.
- Spouse transfer — gift shares to a lower-earning spouse to use their dividend allowance and basic-rate band. This is a genuine transfer, not a paper one. Salaried owners should also consider pension salary sacrifice for NI savings.
Common pitfalls
- Illegal dividends — a company can only declare dividends out of distributable profits. Paying dividends from a loss-making company is unlawful and HMRC may treat them as loans (s.455 tax).
- IR35 impact — if you're inside IR35 on a contract, the deemed-employment payment rules eat into the tax advantage of a dividend structure. Check with the IR35 calculator.
- Scotland — dividend tax rates are set UK-wide (unlike income tax), so Scottish taxpayers pay the same 8.75%/33.75%/39.35% on dividends, even if salary is taxed under Scottish bands.
- Higher-rate drift — frozen thresholds push more dividend income into the 33.75% band each year. Plan timing of dividend declarations if you're near the £50,270 line.