When you employ people, you’ll know that PAYE is the system for deducting tax and National Insurance from salaries. But what happens when you provide small perks, gifts, or expenses that don’t neatly fit into payroll or P11D reporting? That’s where a PAYE Settlement Agreement (PSA) can save you a lot of hassle.
A PAYE Settlement Agreement is a special arrangement you make with HMRC that lets your company pay the tax and National Insurance on certain expenses or benefits on behalf of your employees.
Instead of staff footing the tax bill for small perks and having to declare them individually, the business takes care of it in one go.
Effectively, you “gross up” the tax so your employees receive the benefit completely tax-free and you cover the cost.
A PSA is designed for items that are:
Examples could be:
You can’t use a PSA for:
A PSA is useful if you:
In short, a PSA makes sense when you want to be generous with your team and keep things simple from a reporting perspective.
You need to apply to HMRC before the 5 July following the tax year in which you gave the benefit. Once agreed, you’ll submit an annual calculation and pay the tax and Class 1B NICs due by 22 October (19 October if paying by cheque).
A PAYE Settlement Agreement can be a smart way to reward your team without drowning in paperwork — but it does come at a cost, since you’re covering both the tax and the NICs. Think of it as part of your staff benefits budget: an investment in goodwill, morale, and keeping your business admin tidy.