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Posted Mon, 16 Dec 2024 15:55:05 GMT by HMRC Admin 10 Response
Hi un01
Is this locum job self employment or employment.  If it is self employment, you would need to register as self employed for self assessment.  (Check how to register for Self Assessment, If it is PAYE employment,please contact us on 0300 200 3300 or via our webchat facility at Contact HMRC.  Provided your employer has notified HMRC of the commencement of your employment, we can arrange for the correct tax code to be applied.
Posted Thu, 02 Jan 2025 09:38:06 GMT by MCN23 N
Hi, apologise if this is not the correct way to post a question. In Job A (main job) earnings are £38,000 With normal allowance and tax code and taxted at 20%. Job B (Private Pension) is £20,000 takes us into 40% bracket. Tax code DO has been assigned meaning the whole amount will be taxed at 40% even though £12,000ish (round up/down) should still be charged at 20% and only the remaining £8,000 should be taxed at 40%. Should also point out that on last 3 Pension payslips they have actually taken 50% tax. I know you cant discuss individual codes. But just trying to understand how it works. thanks
Posted Mon, 06 Jan 2025 17:08:44 GMT by Claire77
Hi I work two part time jobs. One is 20 hours at £12 a hour and the other 15 hours, a week term time only. However I'm paying only around £5 a month tax on the primark job and paid £124 tax on the 15 hour school job. My tax code for the school job is 70T. Could you help me, with this and it doesn't seem right
Posted Thu, 16 Jan 2025 11:29:52 GMT by HMRC Admin 16 Response
You can use the following link to check your tax code/s is/are correct. Update tax code If you are unable to resolve your query this way, please contact HMRC to check your tax codes. Income Tax Enquiries 
Posted Tue, 06 May 2025 12:26:38 GMT by Shabena Williams-Crockwell
Good Afternoon, I just have a question one of my family members currently work a full time 37.5 hours a week job. They are looking for a part time job and was offered a 7 hour a week job which works for them and there schedule. However although hired through a company they are hired as being self-employed. We looked into the self assessment thing for self employed people and put in the amount they will be paid weekly which is just about £85.00 a week as they are only doing a small cleaning job for 1hour a day. When seeing the calculations it was saying they will have to pay tax if like £75 a week which makes the job irrelevant. It was also on about there profit being £600. It asked for the weekly amount paid for part time role and monthly amount paid before deductions for full time role. Can some help me or advise me what we should do
Posted Tue, 06 May 2025 12:56:13 GMT by Dfm1987 Mastracci
Hi there Can anyone advise if I get taxed too much if I cut my hours from 28hrs to 8hrs and then get another job for 20hrs elsewhere. Reason being the job I am doing is too demanding for 28hrs but I can do another part of it in 8hrs and they’ve agreed to employ another person to do 28hrs. I’ve been offered another job for 20hrs. Is this worth it? My 28hr job is £13.81per hour and the 20hr job is £12.50 per hour. Thank you :)
Posted Tue, 06 May 2025 13:01:18 GMT by Shabena Williams-Crockwell
Hi I am got a full time role 37.5 employment and a self employed role 7 hours a week cleaning. What do I do as I’m not sure the work for the 7 hours is worth it as based on the self assessment I’ll be paying 75 a week for tax. Can I split my self employment with family so we can all work enough to earn under the £1000 and not pay tax
Posted Wed, 14 May 2025 10:56:35 GMT by Clare Brennan
Good Morning I currently work in a secondary school as a LSA - Learning Support Assistant. I am on a temporary contract so that means until i am there 4 fours i dont get paid for holidays. I dont work in the summer at all but i am still kept as they say on their books and i might get a tax rebate. Is it possible for me to get a second job and not be taxed 20% as i am always still on the books of the school. Is there anyway i can inform HMRC that even though i get money from tax rebate i dont work over the summer. Many thanks Clare
Posted Wed, 14 May 2025 14:17:52 GMT by Leanne Johnson
Sorry if this has been answered already on this post... I have a main job earning £52,500 but pay my pension by salary sacrifice so taxable income is £48,300 and therefore I pay basic rate tax. I also have a second job which is not regular as i work as and when is needed. Last year from this job i earned c. £1,800 so still within basic rate tax if i earn the same again this year from that job. The second job is on tax code BR. What i am unsure about is....if in December when my main job declares bonuses, if i am lucky enough to get a bonus, this will push me into high rate tax bracket at 40% but that will only be the case if i get a bonus, or if i don't get a bonus but end up working more hours than i have previously in the second job. As i won't know until December at the earliest if i am likely to breach the high rate tax threshold, what tax code do i tell the second job to use? Do they continue using BR until i know i have breached the threshold and then use D0 or do i wait until the end of the tax year then get a bill for tax owed or an adjusted tax code or my main job for the following tax year. Not sure what to do as I don't want to get a bill at the end of the year for tax owed but also don't know at this point if I will breach the high rate tax threshold and don't wan to be paying more tax than is necessary now.
Posted Thu, 15 May 2025 12:27:25 GMT by HMRC Admin 20 Response
Hi Clare Brennan,
You can update the information via your personal tax account - Personal tax account: sign in or set up
Thank you.

 
Posted Thu, 15 May 2025 12:30:41 GMT by HMRC Admin 20 Response
Hi Leanne Johnson,
The 2nd job will automatically be taxed at basic rate based on the figures you have given.
It will not change until there is a change in circumstances and in this case, that change would be any potential bonus.
Once you have confirmation that it is being paid, you can ask for the 2nd job code to be changed for the remainder of the year. it is possible though, that tax may
still be due once your overall income details are held at the end of the tax year.
Thank you.

 

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