As a director and shareholder of your own limited company, figuring out how to extract money from your business efficiently isn’t just about cash flow—it’s about minimizing the tax drag that quietly eats into your profits. The 2025/26 tax year brings specific thresholds that, if you understand them, can save you thousands.
Let’s break down the strategy that most tax advisers recommend for single-director companies.
The Two-Pillar Approach: Salary Plus Dividends
The golden rule for limited company directors is simple: don’t rely on salary alone. The most tax-efficient structure combines a strategic salary with dividend payments. Here’s why this works:
- Salary is taxable as income but gives your company corporation tax relief
- Dividends are taxed at lower rates and carry no National Insurance contributions
- Together, they let you stay within favorable tax bands while maximizing deductions
Key 2025/26 Thresholds You Need to Know
Several critical numbers define your optimal pay strategy:
| Threshold | Amount | Why It Matters |
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | Income tax-free up to this amount |
| Dividend Allowance | £500 | Tax-free dividend income |
| Basic Rate Upper Limit | £50,270 | Total income (salary + dividends) before higher rates kick in |
| NI Secondary Threshold | £5,000 | Employer National Insurance starts here |
| Lower Earnings Limit | £6,500 | Minimum for state pension eligibility |
These thresholds remained largely unchanged from recent years, making planning more straightforward.
The Recommended Strategy: £12,570 Salary + Dividends
For most single-director limited companies, the standard advice is clear:
Pay yourself £12,570 annually in salary (that’s £1,047.50 per month or £241 per week).
Why This Specific Amount?
- Zero income tax: You’re using your full personal allowance without paying any income tax
- Corporation tax relief: Your company deducts the full salary as a business expense, saving approximately £2,587 in corporation tax at the 19% rate
- No employee National Insurance: You don’t pay NI until income exceeds £12,570
- State pension protection: You’re above the £6,500 lower earnings limit, maintaining your state pension record
Then Add Dividends for the Rest
After setting your salary at £12,570, any additional income should come as dividends. To stay within the basic rate band:
- Maximum dividends: £37,700 (this keeps your total income at £50,270)
- First £500: Tax-free due to the dividend allowance
- Remaining £37,200: Taxed at 8.75% (basic rate dividend tax)
The Math: What You Actually Pay
A director earning £50,270 total (salary + dividends) in 2025/26 pays approximately £3,255 in personal tax—an effective tax rate of just 6.5%.
Compare this to taking the entire £50,270 as salary, where you’d face:
Income tax at 20% on most of it
Employee NI at 8%
No dividend tax advantage
The salary-dividend split saves thousands.
Alternative Strategy: Lower Salary at £5,000 or £9,100
Some directors opt for a lower salary to reduce employer National Insurance:
| Salary Option | Annual Amount | Pros | Cons |
| NI Secondary Threshold | £5,000 | Minimal employer NI | Doesn’t use full personal allowance |
| NI Employee Threshold | £9,100 | No employee NI | Less corporation tax relief than £12,570 |
| Full Personal Allowance | £12,570 | Maximum tax efficiency | Standard recommendation |
The £9,100 option sits at the employee NI threshold, meaning you pay no employee NI and the company pays minimal employer NI. However, you lose some corporation tax deduction compared to the £12,570 approach.
For most directors, £12,570 remains the optimal choice because the corporation tax savings outweigh the extra employer NI.
Important Caveats Before You Commit
1. Your Company Must Have Available Profits
Dividends can only be paid from post-tax retained profits. You cannot distribute money the company doesn’t legitimately have after accounting for all expenses and corporation tax.
2. Cash Reserves Matter
Even if profits exist on paper, ensure your business maintains:
6–8 weeks of fixed costs as a cash reserve
Adequate funds for reinvestment in equipment or growth
No undercapitalization that threatens operations
3. Your Personal Situation May Differ
The £12,570 + dividends strategy works for the “typical” single-director company, but exceptions exist:
Multiple directors: You and your partner can split dividends if both hold shares
Other income sources: If you have additional income outside the company, your optimal salary might shift
Higher income needs: If you need more than £50,270 total, higher-rate dividend tax (33.75%) applies
4. Commercial Reasonableness
Your salary should reflect what it would cost to hire someone for your role. Model your payroll as a genuine business cost—if the business can’t afford a market-rate salary profitably, it may need margin improvement before increasing drawings.
How to Actually Pay Yourself
For Salary:
- Set up regular payroll runs (monthly is typical)
- Register as an employer with HMRC if you haven’t already
- Issue payslips showing salary, tax, and NI deductions
- Submit payroll information and pay HMRC by the due dates
For Dividends:
- Confirm available post-tax profits exist
- Hold a director’s meeting to declare the dividend
- Issue dividend vouchers to shareholders
- Pay the dividend amount (usually via bank transfer)
- Record it in your company accounts
The Bottom Line
For 2025/26, the most tax-efficient approach for most limited company directors is:
£12,570 salary + up to £37,700 dividends = £50,270 total income with ~£3,255 personal tax
This strategy leverages your personal allowance, maximizes corporation tax relief, stays within the basic rate band, and avoids higher-rate taxes on most of your income.
However, always consult your accountant before finalizing your pay structure. Your specific circumstances—profit levels, cash position, other income sources, and future business plans—might warrant a different approach.
Tax efficiency matters, but don’t let “the tax tail wag the dog.” Your business needs sustainable profits, adequate cash reserves, and room to grow. Balance tax savings with commercial reality.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general information for UK limited company directors in the 2025/26 tax year. Tax laws change, and individual circumstances vary. Always seek professional advice from a qualified accountant before making financial decisions.