Reform UK - Business tax
Abolish IR35 rules
Remove off-payroll working rules that tax disguised employment through personal service companies.
Last updated: May 2026.
Compliance baseline
Reform's 2024 Contract proposed abolishing IR35. The rules are designed to prevent employees being taxed more lightly by working through personal service companies.
- Contractors and client firms gain flexibility.
- PAYE-equivalent receipts are at risk.
- Avoidance behaviour drives the range.
Core trade-offs
Contractors and hiring firms gain lower compliance costs and more flexibility. The Exchequer risks losing income tax and NI as work shifts into company structures.
- Contractors and agencies gain directly.
- Treasury loses anti-avoidance protection.
- Employee-to-contractor substitution may rise.
Illustrative fiscal impact
+GBP 1.0bn to +GBP 8.0bn. Central estimate: +GBP 3.5bn.
- Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
- Avoidance-sensitive is the main scale marker.
- Gross costs and receipt offsets are separated in methodology.
- Behaviour and pass-through widen the range.
- This is not an official costing.
Economic impact by 2027-28
- Jobs: Raises contracting flexibility, but may substitute away from employee jobs rather than create work.
- Wages: Some contractors receive higher net pay; employees may face casualised terms.
- Prices: Limited direct price effect outside professional services and projects.
- GDP / productivity: Could improve matching, but tax-driven incorporation lowers measured productivity quality.
Assessment
Abolishing IR35 reduces compliance burdens for genuine contractors, but also reopens a large boundary between employment and company taxation. The policy may improve flexibility in some professional services, yet the fiscal and fairness risks are substantial if ordinary employment is relabelled as contracting.
Confidence: Low. The contractor base is known only imperfectly, and behaviour around tax boundaries is highly sensitive to enforcement.
Main risks
- Tax leakage: More labour income may be routed through lower-tax company structures.
- Employment substitution: Firms may convert employee roles into contractor arrangements to reduce tax and obligations.
- Fairness concern: PAYE employees may face higher relative tax burdens than similar contractors.
Safeguards
- Replace IR35 with clearer status and anti-avoidance tests.
- Publish HMRC sector exposure estimates.
- Keep strong penalties for artificial incorporation.
Academic evidence
Saez, Slemrod and Giertz, Journal of Economic Literature, 2012
Taxable income responses
Taxable-income elasticities include avoidance, income shifting and reporting responses, not only real work effort.
Relevant because IR35 directly concerns boundary-shifting between employment and contracting.
Kleven, Knudsen, Kreiner, Pedersen and Saez, Econometrica, 2011
Third-party reporting and evasion
Tax evasion is much lower where income is third-party reported than where income is self-reported.
Supports the revenue-risk case for anti-avoidance rules like IR35.
Unwilling or Unable to Cheat? Evidence From a Tax Audit Experiment in Denmark (2011)
UK government evidence
HM Revenue and Customs, 2026
Illustrative tax changes
HMRC ready-reckoners show large revenue effects from income-tax, NI, VAT, fuel-duty and corporation-tax changes.
Primary fiscal scale anchor.
Reform UK, 2024
Reform tax detail
The Contract specifies thresholds, duties and business-tax proposals while claiming annual cost and saving totals.
Defines broad current tax pledges.
Sources
- PolicyLens illustrative scenario methodology: Abolish IR35 rules Internal - PolicyLens, 2026
- The Elasticity of Taxable Income Academic article - Saez, Slemrod and Giertz, Journal of Economic Literature, 2012
- Direct effects of illustrative tax changes Official tax data - HM Revenue and Customs, 2026
- Our Contract with You Party policy document - Reform UK, 2024
- Unwilling or Unable to Cheat? Evidence From a Tax Audit Experiment in Denmark Academic article - Kleven, Knudsen, Kreiner, Pedersen and Saez, Econometrica, 2011
- Our Policies Party policy source - Reform UK, 2026
Other Reform UK policies
PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.