Learning aim
Students can explain how PAYE works in a partial first tax year, recognise an emergency tax code, complete a Starter Checklist correctly, and know when and how to claim a year-end refund.
National Curriculum links
- PSHE Association KS5 H28: the rights and responsibilities of employees, including payslips and tax codes
- Citizenship KS5: the legal employment framework and HMRC obligations
- Maths KS5: percentage calculations in income-tax contexts
What you'll need
- Sample Starter Checklist (HMRC form)
- Sample payslip with emergency tax code 1257L W1
- Sample P45 (front and back)
- UK Tax Drag P60 reading guide for reference
- Mini-whiteboards
Lesson structure (50 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Walk through the Starter Checklist box by box. Don't require independent tax-code calculation; show pre-computed figures. Focus on recognising "is this cumulative or W1/M1?" on a payslip.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Pupils research the difference between Statements A, B, and C on the Starter Checklist. They calculate the implication if a Year 13 student wrongly ticks Statement C (claiming they have other taxable income).
SEND adaptations
For pupils with dyscalculia: focus on conceptual understanding rather than calculation. Use the visual analogy of "the box of monthly allowances" — full year = 12 monthly boxes; mid-year starter has 6 unused boxes that should be returned but only with the right tax code.
EAL support
Vocabulary: "PAYE", "tax code", "Personal Allowance", "emergency code", "cumulative", "Starter Checklist", "P45", "P60". Provide a glossary card. Sentence frames: "My tax code is ___ because ___."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) name the Starter Checklist statements; (2) recognise an emergency W1/M1 code on a payslip; (3) calculate the tax difference between cumulative and W1/M1 codes for a mid-year starter; (4) explain how a refund is claimed.
Homework pack
Three activities to consolidate PAYE mid-year starter mechanics. ~35 minutes.
Starter Checklist walk-through
What pupils do: Complete a (fictional) Starter Checklist for "Jamie, 18, starting their first ever job on 1 November 2026 earning £22,000/year." Mark which Statement (A/B/C) applies.
Expected output: Completed checklist with correct Statement.
Marking guidance: 5 marks — 2 for correct Statement A choice, 3 for accurate completion.
Code comparison
What pupils do: Calculate the income tax paid by November–March (5 months) for a £24,000 starter on (a) cumulative 1257L and (b) emergency 1257L W1/M1.
Expected output: 2 calculations with monthly breakdown.
Marking guidance: 6 marks — 3 per accurate calculation.
Refund process
What pupils do: Explain in 200 words how a UK taxpayer claims a tax refund after the end of the tax year. Mention P60, P800, and the gov.uk Personal Tax Account.
Expected output: 200-word explanation.
Marking guidance: 6 marks — 2 for each key element accurately described.
Homework pack
Four activities to consolidate UK income tax mechanics. ~30 minutes.
Band calculation
What pupils do: For each gross salary, calculate the UK income tax (England/Wales/NI 2026/27 rates): (a) £15,000, (b) £30,000, (c) £55,000, (d) £85,000. Show the band split for each.
Expected output: 4 calculations with band-by-band working.
Marking guidance: 2 marks per accurate total (8 marks). Bonus 4 marks for correct band splits.
Personal Allowance research
What pupils do: What is the Personal Allowance? Why does it exist? Who loses it (the taper rule)?
Expected output: A 3-question short-answer response.
Marking guidance: 2 marks per accurate answer. 6 marks total.
Public spending
What pupils do: Find 5 different things UK income tax pays for. Order them by approximate share of government spending (biggest first).
Expected output: A ranked list of 5 spending categories.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per category, 1 mark per correct relative ranking. 8 marks total (e.g. NHS, pensions, education, defence, welfare).
Extension (optional)
What pupils do: Compare England, Scotland, and Wales income tax for someone earning £50,000. Which nation pays the most? Why?
Expected output: A 3-nation comparison table plus 2-sentence explanation.
Marking guidance: Up to 6 marks for accurate research and conclusion (Scotland pays more above ~£28k).
Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)
Ask a working adult: "Name three things you think our tax money pays for." Compare their answers to what you learned in class.
Classroom safeguarding
Related lesson plans
- Understanding your first payslip (KS3 · Year 7 / Year 8)
- National Insurance — what it is, who pays it (KS3 · Year 8)
- Tax codes and emergency tax — decoding the letters and numbers (KS3 · Year 8 / Year 9)
- All lesson plans (KS1 · KS2 · KS3 · KS4) →