Learning aim
Pupils can explain what income tax is, why government collects it, and how the UK's band system means people on different incomes pay different rates.
National Curriculum links
- PSHE Association KS3 L24: about the role money plays in their own lives
- Citizenship KS3: the role of government in raising and managing public money
- Citizenship KS3: how taxes are used to provide public services
- Maths KS3: solve problems involving percentage change including financial contexts
What you'll need
- "Where does our tax money go?" infographic (NHS, education, roads, defence, etc.)
- UK Income Tax bands 2026/27 visual aid
- Tax calculator worksheet
- Mini-whiteboards
- Calculators
Lesson structure (50 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Calculate tax on simple incomes only (£15k, £20k, £25k). Provide a tax-band table on a sheet. Calculator allowed. Focus on understanding what each band means rather than fast calculation.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Calculate tax on £55,000 and £130,000 (crossing into higher and then additional rate). Pupils explain in writing why a country might use a "progressive" tax system. Stretch question: "What would happen if everyone paid the same flat rate?"
SEND adaptations
For pupils with dyscalculia: pre-fill the band calculation template so pupils only do the final percentage step. For pupils with autism: provide a clear flowchart "is your income below £12,570? If yes → £0 tax. If no → calculate tax on the slice above £12,570 at 20%."
EAL support
Vocabulary: "income tax", "Personal Allowance", "band", "rate", "marginal", "progressive". Sentence frames: "If you earn £___, you pay £___ in tax." "The first £12,570 you earn is ___ because of the Personal Allowance."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) define income tax in one sentence; (2) name the four UK Income Tax bands and rates; (3) calculate the income tax on a £25,000 income; (4) explain in their own words why earning more never reduces overall take-home pay.
Homework
Ask a parent, carer or older sibling: "Name three things you think our tax money pays for." Write the three answers and bring them next lesson.
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) →