Methodology note
Add foreign-worker employer NI surcharge: calculation note
Assumptions behind the Add foreign-worker employer NI surcharge scenario. Implementation detail is incomplete, so uncertainty is explicit.
View main policy page: Add foreign-worker employer NI surcharge
Central fiscal result
-GBP 2.5bn - Net fiscal impact in 2027-28
Low case: -GBP 5.0bn. High case: +GBP 1.0bn. Positive numbers are fiscal costs or borrowing pressure. Negative numbers are Exchequer savings or receipts.
Scenario and baseline
- Employer NI on foreign workers rises to 20%.
- British workers remain on the standard employer NI rate.
- Health, care and very small firms are exempt.
- No replacement visa levy is modelled.
Affected population
- Affected units are employers and foreign-worker employee jobs.
- Exposure depends on payroll, nationality and exemptions.
- Domestic workers may benefit if substitution is possible.
- Consumers face higher costs in exposed sectors.
Gross impact
- Reform claimed about GBP 4bn annual revenue.
- Central case scores GBP 2.5bn after exemptions and behaviour.
- High case allows receipts loss from reduced employment.
- Output effects are shown separately, not fiscal-scored.
Fiscal build-up, central case
- Additional employer NI receipts: -GBP 3.8bn
- Lower PAYE and NI from reduced employment: +GBP 0.8bn
- Administration and compliance: +GBP 0.3bn
- Exemption leakage: +GBP 0.2bn
Central net impact: -GBP 2.5bn in 2027-28.
Behaviour and pass-through
- Low case assumes high compliance and limited labour-supply response.
- Central case assumes some hiring reduction and exemption planning.
- High case assumes shortages reduce output and tax receipts.
- Prices rise where employers pass on the surcharge.
Phasing
- 2026-27: -GBP 0.5bn. Preparation or partial implementation.
- 2027-28: -GBP 2.5bn. Main scenario year.
- 2028-29: -GBP 2.0bn. Behaviour and pass-through develop.
- 2029-30: -GBP 1.5bn. Steady-state uncertainty persists.
Main source groups
- S1: Reform Contract defines the 20% rate and exemptions.
- S2: HMRC NI ready-reckoners frame rate-change scale.
- S3: UK immigration and tax-mobility studies inform wage and recruitment-risk assumptions.
- S4: Current Reform page confirms stronger migration controls.
- S5: No official payroll exposure table was found.