£43,000 Self-Employed After Tax Scotland 2025-26
Sole trader / freelancer · Scottish Income Tax · Class 2 + Class 4 NIC · 2025-26
£43,000 self-employed Scotland — full tax breakdown 2025-26
| Item | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross profit | £43,000 | £3,583 |
| Personal Allowance (tax-free) | £12,570 | £1,048 |
| Income Tax (Scottish rates) | −£6,213 | −£518 |
| Class 2 NI (£3.45/week) | −£179 | −£15 |
| Class 4 NI (6%/2%) | −£1,826 | −£152 |
| Net take-home | £34,782 | £2,899 |
Scottish Income Tax bands 2025-26
| Band | Rate | Income range |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | 0% | Up to £12,570 |
| Starter Rate | 19% | £12,571 – £15,397 |
| Basic Rate | 20% | £15,398 – £27,491 |
| Intermediate Rate | 21% | £27,492 – £43,662 |
| Higher Rate | 42% | £43,663 – £75,000 |
| Advanced Rate | 45% | £75,001 – £125,140 |
| Top Rate | 48% | Above £125,140 |
Scotland vs England comparison — £43,000 self-employed
England gives £127 more take-home at this income level. Above £43,662 Scotland's 42% Higher rate (vs England's 40%) results in higher tax for Scottish taxpayers. Class 2 and Class 4 NI are identical across all UK nations.
Self-employed NIC on £43,000 profit (UK-wide)
| Class 2 NI (£3.45 × 52 weeks) | £179/year |
| Class 4 NI (6% on £30,430) | £1,826 |
| Total NI | £2,005 |
NI is set at UK level — the same rates apply in Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
Personalised insights for £43,000 self-employed profit in Scotland
On £43,000 sole-trader profit taxed under Scottish Income Tax, you give HMRC roughly £32 for every working day of the year, keeping 81% of what you invoice after Income Tax, Class 2 NI and Class 4 NI. Your Class 2 bill (£179/year flat) represents 9% of your total NI, while Class 4 (£1,826) accounts for 91% — Class 4 scales with profit while Class 2 stays fixed.
You sit £663 below the £43,663 Scottish Higher Rate threshold — staying beneath keeps your marginal rate at 21% Intermediate plus 6% Class 4 NI (27% combined) instead of 44%.
If your profit grows by +£5,000 to £48,000, you would keep roughly £2,739 of that increase after Scottish Income Tax and NI — a marginal deduction of about 45%.
These figures assume a sole trader with no other income sources. Use the calculator above to model pension contributions or mixed income scenarios.
£43,000 self-employed take-home pay in Scotland explained
As a self-employed sole trader or freelancer in Scotland with £43,000 profit in 2025-26, you pay Scottish Income Tax rather than the standard UK rates. Scotland has six Income Tax bands, including a 19% Starter rate (below the UK 20% Basic rate) but a 42% Higher rate above £43,662 (compared to 40% in England and Wales).
National Insurance is unaffected by your region — Class 2 NI (£3.45/week, £179/year) and Class 4 NI (6% on profits £12,570–£50,270, 2% above) are the same across all UK nations. This means Scotland vs England differences are purely driven by Income Tax.
Self-employed tax is paid via Self Assessment. HMRC automatically applies Scottish Income Tax rates if you are resident in Scotland. Tax due dates are 31 January and 31 July (payment on account).
Frequently asked questions
How much is £43,000 self-employed after tax in Scotland?
In Scotland, £43,000 self-employed profit in 2025-26 gives take-home pay of £34,782/year (£2,899/month). Deductions: Income Tax £6,213, Class 2 NI £179, Class 4 NI £1,826.
Does Scotland have different self-employed NI rates?
No. National Insurance for self-employed people (Class 2 and Class 4) is set at UK level and is identical in Scotland, England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Only Income Tax differs in Scotland via the Scottish Income Tax rates.
What are the Scottish Income Tax rates for self-employed in 2025-26?
Scotland has six Income Tax bands for 2025-26: Starter 19% (£12,570–£15,397), Basic 20% (£15,397–£27,491), Intermediate 21% (£27,491–£43,662), Higher 42% (£43,662–£75,000), Advanced 45% (£75,000–£125,140), Top 48% (above £125,140). These replace the UK-wide 20%/40%/45% rates for Scottish taxpayers.
How does Scotland self-employed tax compare to England on £43,000?
On £43,000 self-employed profit, Scotland take-home is £34,782 vs England take-home of £34,909 — a difference of £127. England gives slightly higher take-home at this income level due to Scotland's higher tax bands above £43,662.
What is the effective tax rate for £43,000 self-employed in Scotland?
The effective tax rate (Income Tax + all NI as % of profit) on £43,000 self-employed income in Scotland is 19.1%. Income Tax is £6,213 and total NI is £2,005, giving total deductions of £8,218.
How is self-employed tax paid in Scotland?
Self-employed people in Scotland pay their tax via Self Assessment, the same as in England. Tax and NI are due by 31 January (for the previous year) and 31 July (payment on account). HMRC automatically applies Scottish Income Tax rates if you are registered as a Scottish taxpayer.