Number of top rate taxpayers surges as frozen thresholds squeeze Brits
Top rate taxpayers surge as frozen thresholds hit Brits

Wednesday 29 April 2026 1:18 pm

Number of top rate taxpayers surges as frozen thresholds squeeze Brits

More people have been dragged into higher tax bands, with the number of higher and additional rate taxpayers in the UK soaring since the start of the decade. Frozen thresholds have pulled nearly two million additional individuals into paying higher rates of tax, despite many not being classified as traditional high-paid professionals.

According to the latest personal income statistics from HMRC covering the 2023/24 tax year, the number of higher-rate taxpayers increased by 654,000, a 12.8 per cent rise, bringing the total to 5.7 million. Meanwhile, the number of additional rate taxpayers also rocketed, surging nearly 57 per cent to 893,000.

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HMRC acknowledged the increase is “likely to be due to the unchanged higher rate threshold and increases in income, largely from employment, resulting in more taxpayers being brought into the higher rate of tax.” The level at which individuals start paying the higher rate of income tax of 40 per cent has been frozen at £50,271 since 2021/22.

High-paid professionals

Rachael Griffin, tax and financial planning expert at Quilter, noted that while the period saw “fairly large increases in pay”, this was partly a result of pay rising to keep pace with inflation. Griffin said: “When combined with frozen thresholds, it has left many taxpayers facing materially higher tax bills with little to no improvement in their standard of living.

“This shift is no longer confined to traditionally high‑paid professions. Experienced teachers, senior nurses and police officers are increasingly being pulled into higher‑rate tax through incremental pay rises, overtime or progression, rather than genuinely high earnings. What was once a marginal issue is now becoming a mainstream experience across large parts of the workforce.”

In April 2023, the threshold for the 45 per cent rate was slashed from £150,000 to £125,140, which also contributed to dragging people into the top band. As a result, one in five taxpayers now earn over £50,000, yet higher-rate taxpayers account for over 70 per cent of all income tax receipts. Griffin argues this shows “just how reliant government finances have become on pulling more people into higher tax bands”.

Pensioners feel the heat

Pensioners were also not immune during the period, with 8.1 million taxpayers of pension age reported in the tax year, an increase of more than one million in a single year. This means roughly 22 per cent of all taxpayers are now over state pension age. While the pension-age demographic has grown, the numbers also reflect rising retirement incomes combined with frozen allowances “clearly playing a major role”.

Griffin said: “The triple lock has been vital in protecting pensioner incomes during a period of high inflation, but its interaction with frozen personal allowances is creating unintended consequences. In practice, state pension increases designed to preserve living standards are increasingly being clawed back through tax, particularly where even modest private pension income is involved.”

Changing landscape

Despite thresholds being frozen until 2031, the tax landscape is changing, particularly for pensions. From April 2029, salary sacrifice exemptions will be capped at £2,000 per year, with the chancellor arguing that the current system mainly benefits high earners, especially “those in the financial services sector putting their bonuses into pensions tax-free”, while minimum-wage earners “don’t benefit at all”. The raid is expected to raise an additional £4.7 billion, with contributions above this level affecting both employer and employee national insurance contributions.

Griffin also noted that higher interest rates from savings tax have boosted government coffers. She said: “Taxable savings interest more than tripled as rates rose, catching millions of savers off guard. While rates have edged down and are unlikely to return to their recent peaks, the episode has reinforced the importance of using ISAs to shelter savings from income tax. For those with a longer‑term horizon, it may also prompt a rethink about relying too heavily on cash returns that may already be past their high point.”

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