UK Salary vs Dividends in 2026: Tax-Efficient Extraction Explained
The legal structure for paying yourself from a limited company — and how AI models the optimal split.
Limited company directors face a recurring question: how much to take as salary (subject to PAYE and NI) versus dividends (taxed at dividend rates with no NI on the dividend itself, but corporation tax paid first). There is no universal answer — only a number that fits your profit, other income, and pension plans.
This is a legal tax planning choice, not a loophole. Getting it wrong costs thousands; getting it right is arithmetic that AI does better than guesswork.
The building blocks
Corporation tax (19%–25% depending on profit band) is paid on company profit. Salary reduces profit before tax but triggers employer and employee NI. Dividends are paid from post-tax profit; individuals pay dividend tax above the allowance.
Many directors take a small salary up to the NI threshold plus employer pension contributions, then dividends for the rest — but personal circumstances change the optimum.
Pitfalls to avoid
Paying dividends when the company lacks distributable reserves is illegal. Missing IR35 considerations for contract work can reclassify income. And taking zero salary can affect State Pension and mortgage applications.
How FinnAccountings helps
Connect your company accounts and payroll. The platform runs live scenarios — salary up, dividend down, pension up — and shows combined personal and company tax. When you approve a payroll run or dividend, figures flow into MTD submissions without re-entry.
Real-time auditing keeps company expenses clean so distributable profit is accurate before you declare dividends.
Review quarterly, not once a year
Profit shifts; tax bands change. Re-run the model each quarter when management accounts close. FinnAccountings AI CFO Agent flags when your current extraction pattern is costing more than an alternative — before the tax year ends.
Put this advice into action
FinnAccountings automates bookkeeping, tax, and VAT for Ireland and the UK.
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