Updated 2026/27 — Cumulative PAYE · Pension Tier Bump Alert · All AfC Bands
NHS Back Pay Calculator 2026/27:
Your Exact Net Arrears After Tax

Received an NHS back pay lump sum, or expecting one? This calculator shows exactly what you will actually receive after income tax, National Insurance, pension, and student loan deductions are applied.

The 2026/27 base pay award of 3.3% was paid on time in April 2026 payslips for most England, Wales, and Northern Ireland staff — the first on-time award in six years. However, back pay still arises from several 2026/27 scenarios:

👥
Band 5 nurse regrading review: Staff found working at Band 6 level receive back pay from 1 April 2026
📈
Promotions and banding corrections — backdated to the effective date of the change
📄
Structural reform payment — any mid-year improvements agreed by the NHS Staff Council, backdated to 1 April 2026
Trusts processing payroll late: where individual employers delayed implementing the award

Scotland’s separate deal of 3.75% was also paid in April for most staff, but structural reform back pay applies there too.

Cumulative PAYE applied to arrears — most calculators don’t do this
Pension tier bump alert: large lump sums can temporarily push you into a higher tier
Higher rate tax band alert: shows if arrears cross the £50,270 threshold
Scotland 3.75% and Scottish tax bands applied correctly
HCAS included and correctly treated as pensionable (AfC s.2.14)
Student loan deductions on 2026/27 thresholds, floored to nearest £1
ℹ️ For Agenda for Change staff, Bands 2–9. Agency, locum and GP practice staff are not covered by AfC back pay rules. Figures are estimates; confirm with your trust payroll department.
3.3%
England/Wales/NI Award
3.75%
Scotland Award
Cumul.
PAYE Method
~65%
Net of Gross (Band 5)
NHS Back Pay Calculator 2026/27

Select your back pay type, band, region, and payment month. The calculator applies cumulative PAYE, pension tier bump logic, and correct NI thresholds to show your exact net arrears.

📅
Payment month matters: Cumulative PAYE means the month you receive arrears affects your tax. Select the actual payment month for accuracy.
⚠️
Pension tier bump: A large lump sum may temporarily push you into a higher pension tier for the payment month only. The calculator flags and adjusts this.
📈
Higher rate alert: If arrears push cumulative earnings above £50,270 (£31,093 Scotland), the calculator shows the 40%/42% tax on the excess.
🌐
Region matters: Scotland uses 3.75%, Scottish tax bands, and 9 pension tiers. Select your correct region for accurate results.
NHS Back Pay · 2026/27 · AfC & HMRC Verified

NHS Back Pay Calculator 2026/27 — Arrears, Tax & Net Take-Home

Calculate exactly how much NHS back pay you'll receive after tax, NI and pension deductions. Three scenarios: delayed pay award, promotion arrears, and acting up. 3.3% England/Wales/NI · 3.75% Scotland.

3.3% England (3.75% Scotland)
Pension tier change alert
HCAS in differential
Cumulative PAYE method
Promotion & acting up
Pro-rata for part-time
📋
Back Pay Scenario
Pay award backdated to 1 April — arrears paid in later month. 3.3% England/Wales/NI · 3.75% Scotland from 1 April 2026.
📅
Award Year
💷
Band & Salary
New / Current Band (post-rise or promoted band)
New Annual Salary (£)
£
Old Annual Salary (£) auto-filled, overridable
£
Contracted Hours / Week 1.00 WTE
hrs
🗺️
Region & HCAS
Region
London HCAS Zone
HCAS is included in BOTH old and new salary before calculating the difference.
Arrears Period
Months of Arrears
months
Number of months from award/promotion effective date to when it was actually paid.
Payment Month (when back pay is received)
💳
Deduction Options
NHS Pension Back pay is pensionable — may change pension tier in payment month
Student Loan Plan
💰
Arrears Calculation
Old salary
New salary
Monthly difference (incl. HCAS)
Months of arrears
Total gross arrears
Gross arrears
Net take-home
💸
Deductions on Arrears (Payment Month: )
Combined monthly gross in payment month: . Deductions are calculated on combined gross and normal gross separately — arrears deductions shown are the difference.
Income tax on arrears
NI on arrears
Pension on arrears
Total deductions
Effective deduction rate
💜 Employer pension: — paid on your behalf, not deducted from you.
Gov.Wales written statement 12 Feb 2026 (3.3% England/Wales/NI) · Scottish Govt PCS(AFC)2026/1 (3.75%) · HMRC cumulative PAYE method · NI monthly thresholds · NHS Employers 2026/27 pay scales & pension tiers · HSC Pension Service (NI 23.2%) · NHSBSA · Back pay is pensionable and may change pension tier in payment month.

How Back Pay Is Taxed; Cumulative PAYE Matters

When you receive back pay, HMRC does not tax it in isolation or spread it across the months it relates to. It is added to your earnings for the month you actually receive it, and cumulative PAYE is applied based on your total year-to-date earnings.

Example: £500 back pay paid in October (month 7), Band 5 nurse on £32,073:

Without Back PayWith Back Pay
Monthly earnings (October)£2,672.75£3,172.75
Cumulative earnings (April–Oct)£18,709.25£19,209.25
Personal allowance used (7 months)£7,332.50£7,332.50
Cumulative taxable income£11,376.75£11,876.75
Tax on back pay£100.00 (20% of £500)
⚠ Higher rate alert: For most Band 2–7 staff, back pay is taxed at 20%. However, for Band 8+ staff or where a large lump sum pushes cumulative earnings above £50,270 (higher rate threshold, England/Wales), the portion above the threshold is taxed at 40%.
🏰 Scotland: The higher rate threshold is just £31,093 — significantly lower than England. Scottish Band 6 and 7 staff receiving multi-month arrears should check the tax band alert carefully.

Pension Tier Bump; the Hidden Lump Sum Effect

A back pay lump sum can temporarily push you into a higher NHS pension contribution tier for the payment month. This does not permanently change your tier — it reverts the following month — but it reduces your net arrears more than you might expect.

Example: Band 5 nurse receives 6 months’ regrading arrears in one payslip:

Normal MonthPayment Month (with arrears)
Monthly gross£2,672.75£6,615.75
Annualised for tier£32,073 → Tier 3 (8.3%)£79,389 → Tier 5 (10.7%) temporarily
Pension deduction£221.84≈£706.88
Extra pension this month+£40.50
✅ Calculator flags this automatically and shows which tier applies to the payment month. Your net gain figure already includes the pension tier bump adjustment.

What Back Pay Scenarios This Calculator Covers

Scenario 1

Band 5 Nurse Regrading (2026/27 Structural Review)

The government committed as part of the 2026/27 pay settlement to fund a review of every Band 5 nurse role in England. Nurses found to be working at Band 6 level are rebanded and receive back pay from 1 April 2026.

Band 5 → Band 6 entry: Monthly difference £657.17/month · Net per month of arrears after tax, NI and pension (Tier 4, 9.8%): approximately £400

Enter the gross arrears total and select “Band regrading / structural review” as your back pay type.
Scenario 2

Pay Award Arrears (When Trust Paid Late)

If your trust processed the 3.3% award after April, you are owed arrears from 1 April 2026.

England, Wales, NI: 3.3% on all AfC pay points
Scotland: 3.75% — enter this rate when Scotland is selected
Wales lowest bands (2–3): may receive 3.8%–5.9% due to the living wage floor — use the actual arrears figure from your payslip
Scenario 3

Promotion Backdated Arrears

Enter the salary difference between your old and new band monthly pay and the number of months backdated. The calculator applies the new band’s pension tier rate to the arrears.

Scenario 4

Banding Correction / Equal Pay Claim

Back pay from a banding correction is calculated and taxed the same way as a promotion. Enter the total gross arrears.

Scenario 5

Overtime, Unsocial Hours and HCAS Arrears

Different pensionability rules apply depending on the type of arrears:

Pay award (basic pay)✅ Pensionable
Banding correction/promotion✅ Pensionable
Unsocial hours arrears✅ Pensionable
HCAS (London weighting)✅ Pensionable (AfC s.2.14)
Overtime arrears❌ Not pensionable

Example Back Pay Calculations (2026/27)

Scenario 1

Pay Award Arrears — Band 5, England, 3 Months

Band / SalaryBand 5 / £32,073
Pay award3.3% = £88.20/month
Arrears period3 months (Apr–Jun)
Back pay gross£264.60
Pension (Tier 3, 8.3%)−£21.96
Income tax (20%)−£48.53
National Insurance (8%)−£21.17
Net back pay received£172.94
Scenario 2

Promotion Backdated 2 Months — Band 5 → Band 6

Band 5 entry monthly£2,672.75
Band 6 entry monthly£3,329.92
Monthly difference£657.17
Arrears period2 months
Back pay gross£1,314.33
Pension (Tier 4, 9.8%)−£128.80
Income tax (20%)−£237.11
National Insurance (8%)−£105.15
Net back pay received£843.28
Scenario 3

Banding Correction 6 Months, Band 5 → Band 6, Paid October (Month 7)

Monthly difference£657.17
Arrears period6 months
Back pay gross£3,943.00
Pension (Tier 4, 9.8%)−£386.41
Income tax (20%)−£711.32
National Insurance (8%)−£315.44
Net back pay received£2,529.83
Scenario 4

Scotland Band 5 — 3.75% Award Arrears, 3 Months

Scotland Band 5 salary£34,544
Monthly gross£2,878.67
Pay award3.75% = £107.95/month
Arrears period3 months
Back pay gross£323.85
Pension (Tier 3 Scotland, 7.0%)−£22.67
Income tax (Scottish int. ~21%)−£63.25
National Insurance (8%)−£25.91
Net back pay received£212.02
Most Band 5 staff will receive approximately 65% of their gross arrears as net pay.
🏰 Scotland: Scottish staff pay slightly more tax on arrears than English counterparts at equivalent salaries because the Scottish intermediate rate (21%) applies at a lower threshold. The calculator applies Scottish bands automatically.

Note (Scenario 3): the pension tier may temporarily increase for the payment month if the combined gross annualises into a higher tier. The calculator shows this and adjusts the net figure accordingly.

How NHS Back Pay Is Calculated Step by Step

1

Calculate Gross Arrears

For pay award arrears:

Monthly arrears = current monthly gross × award %
Gross arrears = monthly arrears × months owed

For promotion or banding correction:

Monthly diff = new band monthly − old band monthly
Gross arrears = monthly diff × months backdated

For part-time staff: multiply by WTE (contracted hrs ÷ 37.5, or ÷ 36 in Scotland).

2

Add to the Payment Month’s Earnings

HMRC adds arrears to your normal monthly pay for the payment month. The combined figure determines your tax rate and pension tier for that month.

3

Apply Cumulative PAYE

Tax is calculated on cumulative year-to-date earnings, including the arrears. If the lump sum pushes cumulative taxable income above the higher rate threshold:

£50,270 England/Wales    £31,093 Scotland

The excess is taxed at 40% (England/Wales) or 42% (Scotland).

4

Deduct NI on Combined Monthly Gross

NI is calculated on total monthly earnings (normal pay + arrears) using 2026/27 thresholds:

8% on monthly earnings between £1,048 and £4,189
2% above £4,189
5

Deduct Pension on Pensionable Arrears

Pension is deducted at your applicable tier rate on pensionable back pay. If the combined monthly gross annualises into a higher pension tier, that higher rate applies for the payment month only.

6

Deduct Student Loan if Applicable

2026/27 thresholds (deductions floored to nearest £1):

Plan 1: £26,900/yr · £2,241.67/mo · 9%
Plan 2: £29,385/yr · £2,448.75/mo · 9%
Plan 4: £33,795/yr · £2,816.25/mo · 9%
Plan 5: £25,000/yr · £2,083.33/mo · 9%
Postgrad: £21,000/yr · £1,750.00/mo · 6%

Regional Differences for NHS Back Pay

NationPay AwardTax TreatmentNotes
England3.3%UK bands: 20% / 40% / 45%Higher rate at £50,270
Scotland3.75%Scottish bands: 19%–48%Higher rate at £31,093, more staff affected by 42% band
Wales3.3% + living wage floorUK bands, C-prefixLowest bands (2–3) may receive 3.8%–5.9%; use actual payslip figure
Northern Ireland3.3%UK bands, no prefixNI pension tiers, employer rate 23.2%

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything you need to know about NHS back pay, cumulative PAYE, pension tier bumps, and the 2026/27 award arrears.

For most England, Wales and Northern Ireland staff, no — the 3.3% base award was confirmed in February 2026 and applied in April 2026 payslips on time. However, back pay is still due for Band 5 nurses subject to the regrading review, staff with promotions or banding corrections, trusts that processed payroll late, and any structural reform payments agreed mid-year backdated to April 2026.

No. Back pay is added to your earnings for the month you receive it. HMRC uses cumulative PAYE — a large lump sum can push you into a higher tax band for that month, though the cumulative system usually self-corrects over subsequent months.

Yes, if the total monthly earnings including back pay exceed your plan threshold. The 2026/27 thresholds are: Plan 1 £26,900/yr, Plan 2 £29,385/yr, Plan 4 £33,795/yr, Plan 5 £25,000/yr, Postgraduate £21,000/yr. Deductions are at 9% (6% postgrad) on earnings above the threshold, floored to nearest £1.

Yes. NI is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270 and 2% above that, calculated in the payment month.

It depends on the type. Pay award arrears, banding corrections, promotion arrears, HCAS arrears and unsocial hours arrears are all pensionable. Overtime arrears are not pensionable. The calculator applies the correct rule per back pay type.

Yes, temporarily. A large lump sum may push your combined monthly gross into a higher NHS pension tier for the payment month only — it reverts the following month. The calculator shows the tier used and adjusts the net accordingly.

The calculator shows a tax band alert. You will pay 40% (England/Wales) or 42% (Scotland) on the portion above the threshold. HMRC’s cumulative system typically corrects any over-deduction over subsequent months.

Scottish AfC staff received 3.75% from April 2026 under a separate two-year deal with the Scottish Government. Select Scotland in the calculator; it applies 3.75% and Scottish tax bands automatically.

As part of the 2026/27 pay settlement, the government committed to fund a review of every Band 5 nurse role in England. If your role is assessed at Band 6 level, you will be rebanded and receive back pay from 1 April 2026. Contact your trust HR or union rep. Use this calculator to estimate your net arrears if confirmed.

The lump sum itself does not increase your pension record. Your higher ongoing salary following a promotion or regrading will increase your future pension accrual from that point forward.

This calculator covers Agenda for Change staff (Bands 2–9). Junior doctor pay falls under DDRB/BMA terms with different calculation rules — speak to your BMA rep.

Very accurate for estimates. We use cumulative PAYE, the correct 2026/27 NI primary threshold (£1,048/month), actual NHS pension tiers with tier bump logic, and HMRC-compliant student loan flooring. Your payslip should match within a few pounds; verify via ESR.

Updated 2026/27  |  Cumulative PAYE · NHS pension tier bump logic · HMRC-compliant student loan flooring  |  For AfC staff Bands 2–9 — confirm figures with trust payroll or ESR