£19,000 Self-Employed After Tax 2025-26

Sole trader / freelancer · Class 2 + Class 4 NIC · 2025-26 tax year

Annual take-home
£17,149
Monthly
£1,429
Income Tax
£1,286
Total NI (Class 2+4)
£565
£

£19,000 self-employed — full tax breakdown 2025-26

Item Annual Monthly
Gross profit £19,000 £1,583
Personal Allowance (tax-free) £12,570 £1,048
Income Tax −£1,286 −£107
Class 2 NI (£3.45/week) −£179 −£15
Class 4 NI (6%/2%) −£386 −£32
Net take-home £17,149 £1,429
Total deductions: £1,851 · Effective rate: 9.7%

Self-employed NIC on £19,000 profit

Class 2 NI (£3.45 × 52 weeks) £179/year
Class 4 NI (6% on £6,430) £386
Total NI £565

Class 2 NI counts towards State Pension and certain benefits. Class 4 NI does not provide direct entitlements. Both are paid via Self Assessment by 31 January.

£19,000 self-employed after tax in Scotland 2025-26

In Scotland, £19,000 self-employed profit gives take-home pay of £17,177£28 more than England/Wales due to Scotland's different Income Tax rates. NI (Class 2 and Class 4) is UK-wide and unaffected by Scottish rates.

£19,000 self-employed take-home pay explained

As a self-employed person (sole trader or freelancer) with £19,000 profit in 2025-26, your tax position differs from employed workers in one key area: National Insurance. You pay Class 2 NI (£179/year) and Class 4 NI (£386/year), instead of employee NI. Income Tax is identical — using the same Personal Allowance (£12,570) and rates (20%/40%/45%).

Self-employed NI is generally lower than employee NI: Class 4 at 6% vs employee NI at 8% on earnings £12,570–£50,270. However, there is no employer NI contribution to your state benefits. Compare using the PAYE vs self-employed calculator.

Tax and NI for self-employed people are paid via Self Assessment — the January 31st deadline covers tax for the previous year, plus a 50% payment on account for the current year. Pension contributions reduce your taxable profit.

Frequently asked questions

How much is £19,000 self-employed profit after tax?

On £19,000 self-employed profit in 2025-26, you take home £17,149 per year (£1,429/month). Deductions: Income Tax £1,286, Class 2 NI £179, Class 4 NI £386. Total NI: £565.

How much National Insurance does a self-employed person pay on £19,000?

On £19,000 self-employed profit, you pay £565 total NI: Class 2 (£179/year flat rate, 52 × £3.45) plus Class 4 (£386) at 6% on profits £12,570–£50,270 and 2% above £50,270. Self-employed NI is lower than employee NI at most income levels.

What is £19,000 self-employed per month after tax?

£19,000 self-employed profit gives you £1,429 per month after Income Tax (£107/month) and NI (£47/month).

How does self-employed tax differ from employed at £19,000?

As a self-employed person on £19,000 profit, you pay Income Tax at the same rates as employed, but National Insurance differs. Self-employed pay Class 4 NI (6%/2%) + Class 2 NI (£3.45/week), whereas employees pay 8%/2% employee NI. Your employer also does not contribute to NI for you.

What is the effective tax rate for £19,000 self-employed?

The effective tax rate (Income Tax + all NI as % of profit) on £19,000 self-employed income is 9.7%. Income Tax is £1,286 and total NI is £565, giving total deductions of £1,851.

How much is £19,000 self-employed after tax in Scotland?

In Scotland, £19,000 self-employed profit gives take-home pay of £17,177/year — £28 more than England/Wales, due to Scotland's different Income Tax bands (same NI applies UK-wide).

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Related calculators:

All Self-Employed Profits £19,000 Employed After Tax Income Tax Rates National Insurance