£3,000 Side Hustle Tax on £30,000 Salary 2025-26

Trading allowance · Additional income tax · Net take-home

Net from hustle
£2,600
Extra tax owed
£400
Taxable amount
£2,000
Effective rate
13.3%

Marginal tax rate on side hustle: 20%

Your salary of £30,000 uses up the personal allowance. Taxable side hustle income is added on top and taxed at the basic rate of 20%. The first £1,000 of side hustle income is covered by the trading allowance and is tax-free.

Full tax breakdown — £30,000 salary + £3,000 side hustle

Item Salary only With side hustle Difference
Gross income £30,000 £33,000 +£3,000
Trading allowance -£1,000 -£1,000
Income Tax -£3,486 -£3,886 -£400
National Insurance -£1,394 same
Annual take-home £25,120 £26,560 +£2,600

NI on PAYE income is unchanged. Class 4 NI (6%) on self-employment profit applies if taxable side hustle profit pushes above £12,570 combined — rare at these income levels.

How is tax calculated on a £3,000 side hustle?

The first £1,000 of side hustle income in any tax year is covered by the trading allowance, meaning it is completely tax-free and does not even need to be declared to HMRC. On your £3,000 of side hustle income, £2,000 is taxable after deducting the £1,000 allowance.

This taxable amount (£2,000) is added on top of your £30,000 salary. Since your Personal Allowance is already used by your PAYE job, the side hustle income is taxed at your marginal rate of 20%, resulting in £400 additional income tax.

You cannot collect side hustle tax through PAYE — you must register for Self Assessment, complete a tax return, and pay the additional tax by 31 January following the end of the tax year. You must register by 5 October after the tax year ends (i.e., 5 October 2026 for the 2025-26 tax year).

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to declare £3,000 side hustle income?

Yes. Your side hustle income of £3,000 exceeds the £1,000 trading allowance. You must register for Self Assessment and declare the taxable amount (£2,000 after the £1,000 allowance) to HMRC. The deadline to register is 5 October following the end of the tax year.

What is the £1,000 trading allowance?

The trading allowance is a £1,000 per year tax-free threshold for self-employment and casual trading income (including selling on eBay, Etsy, Vinted, renting on Airbnb, and freelance work). You only pay tax on the amount above £1,000. On £3,000 of side hustle income, the taxable amount is £2,000.

How do I pay tax on side hustle income?

Side hustle income is not collected through PAYE. You must register for Self Assessment by 5 October after the tax year ends, then file your tax return by 31 January. HMRC will calculate the tax owed — in your case approximately £400 on top of your normal PAYE tax — and you pay by 31 January. If you are new to self assessment, you can register at gov.uk/log-in-file-self-assessment-tax-return.

Can I claim expenses on my side hustle?

If you claim the £1,000 trading allowance, you cannot also claim expenses on the same income — it is one or the other. If your actual expenses exceed £1,000, it may be more tax-efficient to claim real expenses instead of the trading allowance. Expenses must be "wholly and exclusively" incurred for the business.

Related pages:

All side hustle calculations Second job tax calculator Self Assessment guide Self-employed tax calculator £30,000 after tax