Child Benefit Tax at £60,000 — 2 children
At £60,000 income with 2 children, £0/year of your child benefit is charged back (0% of £2251.60).
HICBC calculation — £60,000 / 2 children
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Adjusted net income | £60,000 |
| Income above £60,000 threshold | £0 |
| Charge percentage (£0 ÷ 200 = 0, capped at 100%) | 0% |
| Annual child benefit (2 children) | £2251.60 |
| HICBC charge (0% of £2251.60) | −£0 |
| Net child benefit retained | £2251.60 |
Personalised HICBC insights at £60,000
Your £60,000 income sits exactly on the HICBC threshold — you keep the full child benefit £2251.60 with zero charge. Any pay rise pushes you into the taper zone. A pension contribution of £0 nets down to roughly £0 after 40% higher-rate relief — and wipes out the £0/year HICBC at the same time, so the combined effective cost is just £0 for a pot boost of £0.
HICBC taper — £60,000 to £80,000 (2 children)
| Income | Charge % | Charge Amount | Net Benefit |
|---|---|---|---|
| £60,000 ← you | 0% | — | £2251.60 |
| £62,000 | 10% | −£225 | £2026.60 |
| £64,000 | 20% | −£450 | £1801.60 |
| £65,000 | 25% | −£563 | £1688.60 |
| £68,000 | 40% | −£901 | £1350.60 |
| £70,000 | 50% | −£1126 | £1125.60 |
| £72,000 | 60% | −£1351 | £900.60 |
| £75,000 | 75% | −£1689 | £562.60 |
| £78,000 | 90% | −£2026 | £225.60 |
| £80,000 | 100% | −£2252 | £0 |
Child benefit tax at £60,000 with 2 children
With an adjusted net income of £60,000 and 2 children, your annual child benefit is £2251.60. The High Income Child Benefit Charge applies at 0%, meaning you must pay back £0 through Self Assessment. Your net child benefit after the charge is £2251.60/year (£43.30/week).
The charge is calculated as 1% of child benefit for every £200 of income above the £60,000 threshold. Your income of £60,000 is £0 above the threshold, giving a charge percentage of 0%.
How to reduce your High Income Child Benefit Charge
The most effective way to reduce the HICBC is to reduce your adjusted net income through pension contributions. Your income is at the £60,000 threshold — any pension contribution will reduce your adjusted net income below the threshold and eliminate any charge. Gift Aid donations also reduce adjusted net income, providing another way to lower the charge.
Family income context at £60,000
If your partner earns the UK median salary of £34,963, your combined household income is roughly £94,963. In that scenario, the £0/year HICBC represents only 0.00% of total family income — a small slice in absolute terms but worth eliminating given how cheap the fix is. A £0 pension contribution would genuinely cost you around £0 after 40% higher-rate relief, while simultaneously saving the £0 charge. The combined net outcome: roughly £0 to add £0 to your pension pot and restore the full £2251.60 child benefit. Few tax-planning moves beat this on a per-pound basis for earners in the £60,000–£80,000 zone.
Frequently asked questions
What is the High Income Child Benefit Charge?
The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) is a tax charge that claws back child benefit when the highest earner in a household has adjusted net income above £60,000. It is calculated as 1% of child benefit received for every £200 of income above £60,000, reaching 100% clawback at £80,000.
At what income is all child benefit charged back?
£80,000. Since April 2024, the full clawback point is £80,000 adjusted net income. Below that, you keep a portion of your child benefit. At £60,000, the charge is 0% — so you pay back £0 and keep £2251.60/year.
How do I pay the High Income Child Benefit Charge?
You pay the HICBC through a Self Assessment tax return. If you do not already complete Self Assessment, you must register with HMRC before 5 October following the end of the tax year. Alternatively, HMRC can collect the charge through your PAYE tax code — contact HMRC to arrange this.
Can pension contributions reduce my HICBC?
Yes. Pension contributions (including salary sacrifice) reduce your adjusted net income, which is the figure used to calculate the HICBC. Your income is at the threshold, so any pension contribution will reduce your adjusted net income below £60,000 and eliminate the charge. This makes pension contributions especially tax-efficient for earners in the £60,000–£80,000 band.
Should I opt out of child benefit to avoid the charge?
At £60,000, you still receive £2251.60/year in net child benefit after the charge. It is generally worth continuing to receive child benefit, as opting out only avoids the admin — you would also lose the £2251.60 net benefit. Only consider opting out if your income is comfortably above £80,000.