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What is Niable Pay?

Updated: 10/10/2023
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Wiki User

11y ago

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Niable pay is as follows:

  1. the employer's NI liability (which you do NOT deduct from the gross pay);
  2. the employee's NI liability (which employers deduct from the gross pay)
  3. the employee's tax liability (ditto)

So you add 2 and 3 together then deduct that from gross pay, hand the net result over to your employee with his payslip, and add 1, 2 and 3 together and send to HMRC. In simple terms ...

This is not much help I know, but is the best I can do, courtesy of Money Supermarket.

Viv Foster

PS The 'Ni' in 'niable' stands for National Insurance, and the word, therefore, is most eloquently spelled: 'NIable'

And no, I don't really get it either.

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Wiki User

11y ago
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Wiki User

9y ago

Niable pay is something that is often heard about in the UK. It is what national insurance is based on. So your Niable pay is what this national insurance would be based on. It can be a different amount than your taxable pay.

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