Child Benefit Rates 2025/26
Child Benefit & HICBC Calculator
The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) — Updated April 2024
The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) is a tax charge that claws back Child Benefit from families where the higher earner's adjusted net income exceeds a threshold. The threshold was significantly reformed from April 2024:
| Income (adjusted net) | HICBC charge | Effective CB rate |
|---|---|---|
| Under £60,000 | None | Full 100% |
| £60,001 – £79,999 | 1% per £200 over £60,000 | Tapered reduction |
| £70,000 (example) | 50% of Child Benefit | 50% kept |
| £80,000 or more | 100% — full claw-back | Effectively nil |
How the HICBC Charge Is Calculated
The charge is 1% of the total Child Benefit received for every £200 that the higher earner's adjusted net income exceeds £60,000.
- Example: Income £68,000. Excess over £60,000 = £8,000. Divided by £200 = 40. Charge = 40% of Child Benefit received.
- For one child: 40% x £1,331.20 = £532.48 HICBC charge per year
- Net benefit: £1,331.20 − £532.48 = £798.72 per year
The charge is collected through Self-Assessment. You must register for Self-Assessment if either you or your partner's income is above £60,000 and you receive Child Benefit.
Why You Should Claim Even If You'll Repay It
Claiming Child Benefit has a hidden but extremely valuable benefit: National Insurance credits. The person who receives Child Benefit gets NI credits for each week of payment if they are not working or earning below the Lower Earnings Limit (£6,396 in 2025/26). These are Class 3 NI credits that count towards your State Pension.
You need 35 qualifying years of NI for the full new State Pension (currently £221.20/week, around £11,502/year). Each missing year of NI reduces your pension by approximately £5.29/week (£275/year). Claiming Child Benefit for even a few years during a career break can add thousands of pounds of lifetime pension income.
Child Benefit Eligibility: Who Can Claim
- You are responsible for a child under 16, or under 20 in approved education or training
- You live in the UK
- The child lives with you (or you pay for them at least as much as the Child Benefit amount)
- You do not have any immigration restriction that prevents claiming public funds
Approved education and training for 16–19 year olds includes: A-levels, T-levels, International Baccalaureate, NVQs up to level 3, and certain approved traineeships. University or higher education does not count. Your child must not be working more than 24 hours per week in paid employment.
How to Claim Child Benefit
- Claim online at gov.uk/child-benefit — fastest option
- Or complete paper form CH2 (CH3 for additions) — download from gov.uk
- Have your child's birth certificate or adoption certificate ready
- You can claim from birth — backdating is possible for up to 3 months
- If your income might trigger HICBC, register for Self-Assessment simultaneously
Child Benefit and Universal Credit
Child Benefit is treated as unearned income in Universal Credit calculations. For every £1 of Child Benefit you receive, your UC award is reduced by approximately 55p (the UC taper rate applied to unearned income). This means:
- Child Benefit of £1,331/year for first child → UC reduced by approximately £732/year
- Net gain from Child Benefit if on UC: approximately £599/year for first child
Even after the UC reduction, you are still financially better off claiming Child Benefit. Always claim both.
Reducing HICBC: Pension Contribution Strategy
Adjusted net income can be reduced by making pension contributions, increasing Gift Aid donations, or other allowable deductions. This is a legitimate and widely-used tax planning approach:
- Earner with £75,000 gross income wants to claim full Child Benefit
- Need adjusted net income below £60,000
- Make £15,000 in pension contributions (salary sacrifice or personal pension)
- Adjusted net income falls to £60,000 — no HICBC payable
- Extra pension contributions worth £15,000 at higher rate = £6,000 tax saved on top of pension benefit
Child Benefit: Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Child Benefit rate for 2025/26?
The Child Benefit rate for 2025/26 is £25.60 per week (£1,331.20 per year) for the first or only child, and £16.95 per week (£881.40 per year) for each additional child. Payments are made every 4 weeks — £102.40 per period for the first child and £67.80 per period for each additional child.
When does the High Income Child Benefit Charge kick in from April 2024?
From April 2024, the HICBC starts when the higher earner's adjusted net income reaches £60,000 (previously £50,000). The charge is fully applied at £80,000 (previously £60,000). The charge is 1% of Child Benefit received per £200 of income over £60,000, meaning it tapers gradually from 0% at £60,000 to 100% at £80,000.
Should I still claim Child Benefit if my income is over £80,000?
Yes. Opt out of receiving the cash payments (via HMRC online), but keep your Child Benefit claim active. This preserves valuable National Insurance credits for the non-working or lower-earning parent, counting towards the State Pension. You face no HICBC when you opt out of payments, but keep all the NI credit benefits. Re-activate cash payments if your income later drops below £80,000.
How do NI credits from Child Benefit work?
The Child Benefit claimant receives a Class 3 NI credit for each week they receive Child Benefit, provided they are not working or earning below the Lower Earnings Limit. These credits count as qualifying years towards the State Pension. At the full new State Pension rate of £221.20/week (2025/26), each qualifying year is worth approximately £275/year in retirement income. Over a 20-year retirement, one missed qualifying year costs around £5,500.
Can Child Benefit be claimed for children in full-time education?
Yes, until they turn 20, as long as they are in approved education or training. This includes A-levels, T-levels, NVQs up to level 3, IB and certain approved vocational programmes. University and higher education courses (level 4 and above) do not qualify. Your child must not be working 24 or more hours per week. Notify HMRC when your child completes or leaves their course.
Do I need to do Self-Assessment because of Child Benefit?
Yes, if your adjusted net income exceeds £60,000 and you or your partner receive Child Benefit. You must register for Self-Assessment with HMRC and file a tax return each year. The HICBC is declared on your Self-Assessment return and collected as part of your end-of-year tax bill. If you're an employed person who has never filed a return, contact HMRC to register as soon as your income crosses £60,000.
What happens to Child Benefit if parents separate?
Child Benefit should be claimed by the parent the child lives with (or lives with most of the time). If the child splits time equally, HMRC uses various criteria to decide who can claim. The claiming parent gets the NI credits. The other parent does not get NI credits. If you separate, update HMRC promptly to ensure the right parent is claiming. Only one person can claim per child at any given time.