What Is a P60 Form or ‘End of Year Certificate’ in the UK?

Everything employers should know about the P60 form, including who needs one, and why P60s are so important.

P60

As part of the PAYE scheme, all UK employees must get a P60 at the end of each tax year. This ‘End of Year Certificate’ is a summary of all their pay and total tax deductions for that tax year.

But what does this mean for you as an employer?

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    Don’t Worry, a P60 Isn’t a Big Job!

    All employers must issue an annual P60 to all their employees by the 31st May after the end of the tax year.

    For example, your employees must have their P60 for the financial year 6th April 2022 to 5th April 2023 by 31st May 2023.

    financial jargon

    There are 3 ways to handle your P60 admin:

    1. Your payroll software can automatically generate P60s for you, saving you hours of paperwork. Synching compatible payroll software with your FreshBooks account makes things even easier.
    2. You can also use HMRC’s free payroll software, as long as you have no more than 10 employees.
    3. If you’re exempt from online filing, you can order paper P60 forms from HMRC to fill in manually. You need to allow at least 7 days for these to arrive through the post, so don’t leave it until May 30th to make an order.

    Or you can instruct your accountant to sort it out for you, of course.

    It’s reassuring to know that you’re only responsible for issuing a P60 based on the work that the employee has done for you. If they have more than one job, they’ll get a P60 from each different employer. You don’t have to worry about collating income tax information from multiple jobs.

    The May 31st deadline is the absolute latest your employees should receive a P60. It’s a great idea to timetable your P60 distribution for the end of the tax year. You can issue them from the 5th April. The information about that tax year isn’t going to change from that date. So, why not get it ticked off the to-do list as soon as possible?

    Reading a P60

    There are a lot of personal and financial details included on a P60 form. But it’s not new information you need to find. Just a summary of each worker’s financial position during the tax year it refers to. A P60 form is proof of earnings and how much tax each employee has paid.

    P60 information includes:

    • Your details and employer PAYE reference number
    • Employee’s details and National Insurance number
    • Annual total pay
    • Total National Insurance contributions (NICs) and tax deducted
    • Student loan deductions
    • Statutory pay received: Shared parental, adoption, paternity or maternity pay
    • Final tax code


    Who Needs a P60?

    Your Employees

    You need to make sure that all workers employed by you on 5th April receive a P60 by the 31st May deadline. If an employee worked for you more than once during the same tax year, you only issue 1 P60.

    Anyone who left before the end of the tax year doesn’t need a P60 because all their information is on their P45. The P60 responsibility lies with the employer at their new job.

    Limited Company Director

    Don’t forget yourself! If your business is a limited company and you take a salary as its director, then you need to issue yourself with a P60 form too.

    Sole Trader

    As a sole trader, you don’t pay yourself a salary, so you don’t get a P60. You just need to give them to your employees.

    Self-Employed and Employed

    If you run your self-employed business and are an employee at the same time, you’ll need to make sure you get your P60 form from your employer. And your status as either sole trader or limited company determines whether or not you need a P60 for your self-employed work.

    This is a slightly more confusing position. You fill in a Self Assessment tax return to declare your self-employed income and pay the relevant income tax. And you’ll need the P60 summary of your concurrent employed income and tax payments to complete this tax return accurately. HMRC considers your total pay altogether, to make sure that you don’t end up paying too much tax.

    Why Are P60s So Important?

    To you, issuing P60 forms are important because they’re a legal requirement. And, if you miss the May 31st deadline, you can be issued with financial penalties. That’s an immediate £300 and then £60 per day until you issue them. No one wants their hard-earned money lost on unnecessary HMRC fines.

    To your employees, their P60 is a very valuable document outside the workplace. As you’ll know if you’ve previously been employed.

    more of the work you love less paperwork

    P60s are used for:

    • Making a claim for tax credits, or any other means-tested benefits. This helps them reduce their tax deducted and improve their tax refund.
    • Claiming an income tax refund or reclaiming overpaid National Insurance.
    • Contributions: You can’t apply for a tax rebate without being able to prove the total tax you’ve paid. Sometimes taxpayers pay too much tax and the tax office can work out a tax refund more efficiently if it has the relevant P60 form.
    • Completing a Self Assessment tax return, if both employed and self-employed.
    • As proof of earnings for a mortgage, loan, renting, or buying other financial products.

    But the importance of the documents to your employees doesn’t need to make this a daunting prospect for you. Issuing P60 forms to your employees is just part of your usual end of tax year processes. And using the available software massively reduces the administrative burden.

    This post was updated in December 2022.

    Claire McCabe

    Written by Claire McCabe, Freelance Contributor

    Posted on December 22, 2022