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Taxation of termination payments

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By John Dunlop

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Published 12 March 2018

Overview

The biggest statutory shake-up in a generation will be happening to the taxation of termination payments with the first wave of changes taking effect on 6 April this year and more changes next year.

 

With effect from 6 April 2018, the following changes will take place:

  1. The long-running argument about PILONS will be cast into the rubbish bin of history. The current position is that payments in lieu of notice (PILONs) on termination of employment benefit from the £30,000 income tax exemption if the employer does not have a contractual right to pay in lieu of notice. From 6 April 2018, all payments in lieu of notice will be taxed as earnings (regardless as to whether they are contractual or otherwise) but see below for the sting in the tail of salary sacrifices. They will therefore be subject to income tax, the employee's NIC and the employer's NIC;

  2. The application of the foreign service exemption will in almost all cases be removed. HMRC's reasoning for this is that it is outdated in the modern world where workers move countries more readily; and;

  3. HMRC do not like payments being made purely for 'injury to feelings' i.e. those payments detailed in Vento etc. From 6 April 2018, the law will be changed so an injury to feeling payment will be subject to income tax and both types of national insurance unless the injury amounts to a psychiatric injury or other recognised medical condition. This will be a tricky threshold to cross but HMRC operate a very helpful clearance service: it requires review and explanation of the relevant medical records and takes about 3 to 4 weeks.

HMRC are in the process of drafting detailed guidance on the application of the new rules and it is hoped it will be published before 6 April.

Proposed changes to subject all termination payments above the £30,000 exemption to employer NICs have been delayed until April 2019.

 

The sting in the tail for Salary Sacrifice

Whilst the removal of the PILON arguments may sound simple, if the employee sacrificed some salary, for, say, enhanced employer pension contributions, this can make the calculation complicated.

The effect of the changes is to fully tax as earnings such part of the termination payment as is deemed to be in respect of unworked notice; the balance can benefit from the £30,000 tax exemption. The amount deemed to be in respect of unworked notice is calculated using "basic pay", which includes pay that would have been received had it not been salary sacrificed, but excludes overtime pay, bonuses, commission, allowances, benefits in kind etc.

There is a divergence of opinion as to when the new rules apply with some people suggesting they won't apply if there is a contractual PILON. Our view is that this is optimistic and all the new rules will apply regardless. Therefore the amount of tax and NICs due from an employee with a contractual PILON clause and a salary sacrifice arrangement will increase.

 

What if the termination date is before 6 April but payment is made after 6 April 2018?

The new rules only apply where the termination and payment is on or after 6 April 2018. If the employment terminates before 6 April the current rules apply.

 

What does this mean for employers?

Employers currently contemplating or negotiating termination agreement need to be aware of the changes to the tax regime which will apply after 5 April. The impact of the change is to potentially increase costs to an employers who may have to increase the value of a termination package to make it equivalently attractive to an employee. Therefore employers should factor in the new rules when considering the negotiation and timing of termination payments.

Some employers have historically decided not to include PILON clauses in their contracts of employment so that employees can benefit from the current tax exemption. We recommend that these employers review their contracts of employment, as there will be no tax upside from April 2018 of not including a PILON in the contracts. Indeed, because any restrictive covenants are unenforceable where PILONs are made without a contractual PILON clause, there will only remain a potentially significant downside of not including a PILON in the contracts after April 2018.

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