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A deep-dive into a variety of pension topics to help you understand and learn more about your pension and the Scheme.
Our blogs will give you information, tips, insights and guidance to help you get to know your pension and support you on your journey to retirement.
Salary sacrifice is an agreement between you and your employer where you give up a small part of your pay, and your employer pays that amount directly into your pension for you instead. You might hear it called salary sacrifice or SMART pension contributions.
Because your salary is then lower, you pay less National Insurance (NI). This means your take‑home pay can actually go up. Your employer may save on NI too.
You can also use salary sacrifice to pay more into your BRASS or AVC Extra pots.
Your employer will have told you if you’re using salary sacrifice when you joined the scheme. If you are, you’ll see it as a deduction on your payslip.
You can only use salary sacrifice if your employer allows it.
In the Autumn Budget 2025, the government announced that from April 2029, if you pay more than £2,000 a year into your pension using salary sacrifice, you and your employer will have to pay NI on anything above that £2,000 limit.
Employee pension contributions will still get income tax relief (as long as they are within annual allowance limits), whether they are made through salary sacrifice or not.
Most people who make typical pension contributions won’t notice any difference.
So, if you save less than £2,000 a year into your pension using salary sacrifice, or you don’t use salary sacrifice at all, these changes won’t affect you.
If you already pay more than £2,000 a year through salary sacrifice (or were planning to), you may want to speak to your employer about what the 2029 changes mean and whether your NI bill will increase. Some people may find it helpful to get independent financial advice.
Even with the £2,000 cap before NI applies, salary sacrifice can still reduce your overall tax bill by keeping your income below the higher‑rate tax threshold.
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