Taper
‹ All playbooks

The £100k cliff

The £100,000 Cliff Playbook for 2026/27

9 min read. Last verified 30 June 2026. 2026/27 rules.

The short answer

Above £100,000 of adjusted net income you lose personal allowance at £1 for every £2 earned, an effective rate of about 60% up to £125,140, and you lose Tax-Free Childcare and funded childcare hours entirely in one step. A pension contribution, SIPP payment, or Gift Aid donation that brings ANI back to £100,000 restores all of it.

Key facts

Most UK tax bands are gradual: earn more, pay a bit more. £100,000 of adjusted net income is not like that. It is a cliff edge where the tax rate jumps and, for parents of young children, support disappears in the same step.

What counts towards the £100,000 line

The test is adjusted net income (ANI): total taxable income, including salary, bonus, the value of RSU vests at the date they vest, dividends, and rental or savings income, minus gross pension contributions and Gift Aid donations. It is not just your salary, which is what catches people who think a £95,000 contract keeps them safely clear.

Two things happen on the same line

Why it is 60%, not 40%

On the slice between £100,000 and £125,140 you pay 40% income tax in the normal way, and you also lose personal allowance that was previously shielding part of your income from tax altogether. Losing that shield is mathematically equivalent to roughly another 20 percentage points of tax on the same slice, which is why the effective rate lands around 60%.

Why it hits parents harder

For a household with young children in paid childcare, the same £1 over £100,000 can also remove Tax-Free Childcare and funded hours, worth thousands of pounds a year per child. Because each parent's ANI is tested individually, a single earner tipping over the line costs support calculated across the whole family's childcare arrangements, not just that parent's own tax.

Who gets caught without meaning to

Three ways back under £100,000

Common questions

What income counts towards the £100,000 cliff?
Adjusted net income: salary, bonus, RSU vest values, dividends, rental and savings income, minus gross pension contributions and Gift Aid donations. It is a total income test, not a salary test.
Do I lose childcare support gradually or all at once above £100,000?
All at once. Unlike the personal allowance taper, which withdraws gradually to £125,140, Tax-Free Childcare and funded hours are lost completely the moment either parent's ANI exceeds £100,000.
What is the fastest way to get back under £100,000?
A pension contribution made before the tax year ends, ideally salary sacrifice for the National Insurance saving, or a Gift Aid donation. Both reduce adjusted net income by the gross amount.

Related playbooks

Sources

Figures verified against gov.uk and gov.scot on 30 June 2026. Constants version 2026/27.3. 2026/27 tax year. This is a modelling tool for general insight, not financial or tax advice.

We use PostHog analytics to understand how the tool is used. No financial data is shared. Privacy Policy