The part of the sick pay funded by the employer is taxable as
employment income (seeEIM06410).
The part of the sick pay funded by the employee is not
taxable as employment income but may be chargeable as Savings and
Investment Income (see
EIM06420 and IPTM6100 and subsequent).
If payments that are chargeable as Savings and Investment Income
are made without deduction of tax at the basic rate, consider
issuing a self-assessment return to the employee (see AP440).
Strictly the contributions of employer and employee and the
means by which administration of the scheme is financed should be
taken into account in deciding the amount of sick pay taxable as
employment income. In practice, administration expenses should be
ignored if the proportion of sick pay taxable as employment income
can be agreed in accordance with the following:
The proportion of sick pay taxable as employment income is:
| Employer's contribution | |
| Employer's contribution + employee's contribution |
each measured over the same period (usually a week, a month
or a year).
If the relative contributions change, the proportion of sick
pay taxable as employment income should be recalculated from the
date of change. The chargeable proportion need not stay constant
over an income tax year; changes can take effect at any time during
the year and may do so during a period of sickness.
(This text has been withheld because of exemptions in the
Freedom of Information Act 2000)
See example
EIM06460.
If the employees' or the employer's contributions are not fixed
in advance it will not usually be possible to calculate the
relative contributions of employer and employee until after the end
of the year.
As soon as possible after the scheme's year end (which need
not coincide with an income tax year end) the scheme's organiser
should be asked to state the employees' total contributions for the
year and the employer's total contributions. The chargeable
proportion can be calculated as in (a) above and used from the date
of calculation until another calculation is prepared at the end of
the following year - provided that all the parties agree to this
procedure (see example
EIM06460).
When first proposing this method you should explain that:
Despite the relatively small effect on the tax due, ensure that the chargeable proportion of sick pay is recalculated after each schemes' year end on the basis of the contributions for that year. If this is not done, the inaccuracy of the calculations is likely to increase. The recalculated proportion should be applied to payments of sick pay made after the date of recalculation but should not be used retrospectively unless a strict statutory basis has been insisted upon.