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UK Tax-Free Allowances 2026/27: Every Allowance You Should Be Using

SYM

The UK tax system contains numerous allowances that allow you to receive income, generate investment returns, or make gains completely tax-free. Most people know about the income tax personal allowance, but fewer take full advantage of the ISA allowance, savings interest allowance, dividend allowance, and capital gains tax annual exempt amount. Using all of these effectively can save hundreds or thousands of pounds per year.

Personal Allowance 2026/27

The personal allowance is the amount of income you can earn before paying income tax. For 2026/27, it remains frozen at £12,570. This applies to employment income, self-employment income, rental income, and pension income. If your income exceeds £100,000, your personal allowance reduces by £1 for every £2 over — meaning at £125,140 you lose the full allowance. You can restore your personal allowance by increasing pension contributions to bring adjusted net income below £100,000.
  • Personal allowance 2026/27: £12,570
  • Frozen until at least 2028 under current plans
  • Reduced by £1 for every £2 above £100,000
  • Fully removed at £125,140 of adjusted net income
  • Pension contributions reduce adjusted net income — can restore allowance

ISA Allowance 2026/27

The ISA allowance is £20,000 per person per tax year. Money invested in an ISA grows tax-free and can be withdrawn tax-free at any time (except Lifetime ISA, which has withdrawal restrictions). You can split your allowance across different ISA types — cash, stocks and shares, Lifetime ISA (maximum £4,000), and Innovative Finance ISA. Couples can shelter £40,000 per year between them. This is one of the most powerful tax-free vehicles available.
  • Annual ISA allowance: £20,000 per person
  • Split across: cash ISA + stocks and shares ISA + LISA (max £4,000) + IFISA
  • All returns (interest, dividends, capital gains) are completely tax-free
  • Couples: £40,000/year combined
  • Use it or lose it: allowance doesn't roll over to next year

Personal Savings Allowance

The Personal Savings Allowance (PSA) lets you earn interest on savings outside of an ISA before paying tax. Basic rate taxpayers (20%) can earn £1,000 of interest tax-free. Higher rate taxpayers (40%) get £500. Additional rate taxpayers (45%) get no PSA. With savings rates around 4–5% in 2026, basic rate taxpayers need roughly £20,000–£25,000 in savings before breaching the PSA. Amounts above the PSA are taxed at your marginal rate.
  • Basic rate taxpayer: £1,000 interest tax-free
  • Higher rate taxpayer: £500 interest tax-free
  • Additional rate taxpayer: no allowance (all interest taxed)
  • At 5% interest: basic rate taxpayer needs £20,000 before PSA breached
  • See /blog/savings-interest-tax-free-allowance-uk for full details

Dividend Allowance and Capital Gains

The dividend allowance was reduced to £500 per year from 2024/25 onwards (down from £2,000 in 2022/23). Above this, dividends are taxed at 8.75% (basic rate), 33.75% (higher rate) or 39.35% (additional rate). The capital gains tax annual exempt amount was reduced to £3,000 from 2024/25. Any gains above this from investments outside an ISA are taxed at 18% (basic rate) or 24% (higher rate) on residential property, or 10%/20% on other assets.
  • Dividend allowance: £500/year tax-free
  • Above £500: 8.75% (basic), 33.75% (higher), 39.35% (additional)
  • Capital gains annual exempt amount: £3,000
  • CGT on investments (non-property): 10% basic / 20% higher
  • Use ISA to shelter investments from dividend tax and CGT

Other Key Allowances

Several other tax-free allowances are worth knowing. The Trading Allowance gives self-employed individuals and those selling online up to £1,000/year tax-free. The Property Allowance gives landlords and property income earners up to £1,000/year tax-free. The Marriage Allowance allows eligible lower-earning spouses to transfer £1,260 of their unused personal allowance to their partner (saving up to £252/year). The Rent-a-Room Scheme allows you to earn up to £7,500/year tax-free from renting a room in your home.
  • Trading allowance: £1,000/year from self-employment/gig economy
  • Property allowance: £1,000/year from property income
  • Marriage allowance: transfer up to £1,260 to higher-earning partner (saves £252/year)
  • Rent-a-room scheme: £7,500/year tax-free from lodger
  • All of these stack — you can benefit from multiple allowances simultaneously
Do tax-free allowances reset each tax year?+

Yes. Personal allowance, ISA allowance, PSA, dividend allowance and CGT annual exempt amount all reset on 6 April each year. Unused amounts (except ISA allowance in a flexible ISA) are lost.

Can I use all the allowances simultaneously?+

Yes. You can simultaneously benefit from the personal allowance, PSA, ISA allowance, dividend allowance, trading allowance, property allowance and marriage allowance — they all apply independently.

#tax free allowances#personal allowance#isa#uk tax 2026

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