NIM02110 - Class 1 NICs : Earnings of employees and office holders : Damages
An employer or former employer may, from time to time, have to
pay ‘damages’. For NIC purposes, these will be payments
made to compensate an employee for loss of earnings for some
reason. They will not be earnings for NICs purposes because they
are not made for acting as an employee, or because an individual is
an employee. They are rather due because of some other reason.
They may include payments made :
- in advance, or in anticipation, of legal proceedings taken by the employee against the employer; or
- to forestall, or in lieu of legal proceedings (that is, where it is intended to settle the matter or dispute by mutual agreement).
‘Damages’ will not, however, include any contractual
payment which an employer is forced to make – for example,
where an employer has to pay overdue or disputed wages. Any such
payments will be ‘earnings’ for NICs purposes. See
NIM07000 for further information
regarding payments made under employment legislation.
The following examples of ‘damages’ situations
are not exhaustive, but employers could make such payments in
connection with anticipated, intended or threatened legal
proceedings to offer or seek financial satisfaction against unfair
dismissal, or to compensate for an accident or injury sustained at
work.
The employer will normally pay damages after negotiations so
there is no obligation to pay or expectancy of payment as of right.
Therefore they are not remuneration or profit from an employment.
As they are not earnings for the purposes of section 3(1) of the
Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 no NICs are
due. See
NIM02010 for guidance regarding the
meaning of “earnings”.
