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CIS Tax Calculator UK 2025/26

Calculate your Construction Industry Scheme deductions instantly. Enter your invoice details and CIS status to see exactly how much is deducted, what you receive, and your estimated self-assessment liability for 2025/26.

Standard rate for subcontractors registered with HMRC and verified by your contractor.

What Is CIS? The Construction Industry Scheme Explained

The Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) is a HMRC tax mechanism that has been in place in the United Kingdom since the 1970s. Its primary purpose is to collect tax at source from subcontractors in the construction industry, reducing the risk of tax evasion in a sector that has historically involved large volumes of cash payments and irregular working arrangements.

Under CIS, every contractor (a business that pays other companies or individuals to perform construction work) must register with HMRC and deduct money from payments made to subcontractors. These deductions are then passed to HMRC and count as advance payments against the subcontractor's income tax and Class 4 National Insurance contributions.

The scheme applies to all construction work carried out in the UK, including: new construction, demolition, repair and maintenance, decorating, groundwork and civil engineering, installation of heating, ventilation, electrical, drainage and plumbing systems, and associated architectural and surveying work directly connected to construction operations.

Who Must Register for CIS: Contractors and Subcontractors

You must register as a contractor under CIS if your business pays subcontractors for construction work, or if your non-construction business spends more than £1 million per year on construction operations in any 3-year period (this is called the "deemed contractor" rule).

You should register as a subcontractor if you do construction work for a contractor. Registration is not compulsory for subcontractors, but failing to register means your contractor must deduct CIS at the higher 30% rate (unregistered rate) instead of the 20% standard rate. Registration is quick, free, and can be done online through your HMRC account.

How CIS Deductions Work: Labour vs Materials

The most important practical point in CIS is that deductions only apply to the labour element of your invoice. Materials, plant hire (with operator), and VAT are all excluded.

CIS Calculation Formula

CIS Deduction = Labour Amount x CIS Rate
Net Payment = (Labour - CIS Deduction) + Materials

Example: £3,000 labour + £1,500 materials at 20% CIS = £600 deducted, £3,900 received

Subcontractors must clearly separate labour and materials on their invoices. If an invoice does not separate them, the contractor may be required to deduct CIS on the full amount, which would be significantly more expensive for the subcontractor.

Standard 20% Rate: How to Get Verified Status

The 20% rate applies to subcontractors who are registered with HMRC under CIS and have been verified by the contractor. When a contractor takes on a new subcontractor, they must verify them with HMRC before making any payments. HMRC will confirm whether the subcontractor is registered and which rate applies.

To register as a subcontractor and access the 20% rate, you need a Unique Taxpayer Reference (UTR), National Insurance number (for sole traders), or Company Registration Number (for limited companies). Registration can be done online at gov.uk/register-as-subcontractor.

30% Rate: Unregistered Subcontractors

If a subcontractor is not registered with HMRC, or if HMRC cannot verify their details when the contractor calls, the contractor must deduct CIS at the higher 30% rate. This is a significantly more expensive position: on a £5,000 labour invoice, the unregistered deduction is £1,500 versus £1,000 at the 20% rate - a difference of £500 per invoice.

Important: If you are working in construction and receiving payments from contractors, you should register for CIS immediately if you have not already done so. The extra 10% deduction (30% vs 20%) is money that sits with HMRC until you file your self-assessment return, effectively acting as an interest-free loan to HMRC from you.

Gross Payment Status: What It Is and How to Qualify

Gross payment status is the most advantageous CIS position. Subcontractors with gross status receive their payments in full, with no CIS deductions at all. They then pay their tax through the normal self-assessment process.

To qualify for gross payment status, you must meet HMRC's criteria:

  • Turnover test: Sole traders must have annual turnover (excluding VAT and materials) of at least £30,000. For companies, each director must show £30,000 turnover, or the company must show £100,000 total.
  • Compliance test: All tax returns must have been filed on time for the past 12 months, all tax payments made on time, and no serious tax compliance issues.
  • Business test: The business must be carried out in the UK through a business bank account.

Gross status is reviewed by HMRC annually. If you miss filing deadlines or tax payment dates, HMRC can revoke gross status, reverting you to the 20% or 30% rate immediately.

Monthly Returns: Contractor Obligations (CIS300)

Every contractor must file a CIS300 monthly return with HMRC by the 19th of the month following payment. The return lists every subcontractor paid, the gross amount paid, the amount of materials included, and the CIS deduction made. Failing to file on time results in a £100 penalty per month, rising to £200 (2 months), then £300 or 5% of the CIS deductions (whichever is greater) from month 3 onwards.

How Subcontractors Reclaim CIS Through Self-Assessment

The CIS deductions made by contractors are not a final tax liability - they are advance payments. When you complete your self-assessment tax return for the tax year (due by 31 January following the end of the tax year), you include all your gross income from CIS work and the total CIS deductions suffered during the year.

HMRC calculates your actual income tax liability for the year. The CIS deductions are credited against this liability. If the CIS deductions exceed your tax bill, you receive a repayment from HMRC. This is very common for subcontractors who have been on the 30% unregistered rate, or who have significant allowable business expenses.

CIS and VAT: Domestic Reverse Charge for Construction

From 1 March 2021, the domestic reverse charge for construction services fundamentally changed how VAT is handled in the CIS supply chain. Under the reverse charge:

  • The subcontractor (supplier) does not charge VAT on their invoice to the contractor
  • Instead, the contractor accounts for the VAT on their own VAT return as if they had both supplied and received the services
  • The subcontractor's invoice should state "Reverse charge: Customer to pay the VAT to HMRC"

The reverse charge applies to VAT-registered subcontractors supplying services to VAT-registered contractors within the scope of CIS. It does not apply to the end customer (the non-construction business commissioning the work), to non-CIS work, or to businesses outside the CIS supply chain.

CIS and Limited Company Subcontractors

Limited companies can register under CIS as subcontractors, and the same 20% standard rate applies when verified. However, limited company subcontractors have an important advantage: CIS deductions are offset against the company's PAYE and corporation tax liabilities, not just against a personal self-assessment bill. This means refunds may be faster and easier to manage through a company's payroll reconciliation.

CIS and IR35: How They Interact

IR35 is the off-payroll working rules that apply to contractors who work through their own limited company but would otherwise be an employee of the end client. CIS and IR35 can apply simultaneously to the same worker in theory, but HMRC guidance indicates that if a worker is within IR35, the CIS deduction mechanism is typically overridden by the IR35 deemed employment provisions.

If you are working through your own limited company on construction projects, you should get specialist advice on whether IR35 or CIS applies to your specific arrangement, as the wrong treatment can result in significant penalties from HMRC.

Common CIS Mistakes and Penalties

MistakeConsequence
Not verifying subcontractors before payingMust deduct at 30% rate; potential penalty
Failing to file CIS300 monthly return£100-£3,000 penalty per month
Not separating labour/materials on invoiceCIS deducted on full amount
Not registering as subcontractor30% deduction rate instead of 20%
Missing gross status compliance testStatus revoked, immediate reversion to 20%
Applying CIS to non-construction workMay create incorrect tax position

Step-by-Step: How to Submit a CIS Monthly Return

  1. Log in to your HMRC online account (or use compatible payroll/accounting software)
  2. Select "CIS" from your account dashboard
  3. Choose "File a monthly return"
  4. Enter the tax month the return covers
  5. For each subcontractor: enter their UTR, name, total gross amount paid, materials amount, and CIS deduction
  6. Submit by the 19th of the following month
  7. Pay the CIS deductions to HMRC by the 19th (or 22nd for electronic payment)

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Construction Industry Scheme (CIS)?
The Construction Industry Scheme (CIS) is a UK tax scheme operated by HMRC that regulates how contractors pay subcontractors in the construction industry. Under CIS, contractors must deduct money from payments made to subcontractors and pass these deductions to HMRC. The deductions count as advance payments towards the subcontractor's tax and National Insurance bill. CIS applies to all construction work carried out in the UK, including building, demolition, civil engineering, installation of systems and property repairs.
How much is CIS tax deducted from payments?
CIS deductions are made only on the labour element of a payment, not on materials. There are three rates: 20% for registered and verified subcontractors (most common), 30% for unregistered or unverified subcontractors, and 0% for subcontractors with gross payment status. If you are not registered under CIS, your contractor must deduct 30% from your labour payments, which is significantly more expensive than the 20% standard rate.
How do I reclaim CIS deductions on my tax return?
CIS deductions are reclaimed through self-assessment. At the end of the tax year, when you complete your self-assessment tax return, you declare all your income and calculate your total tax liability. You then enter the total CIS deductions that contractors have made from your payments. HMRC offsets the CIS deductions against your tax bill. If CIS deductions exceed your tax liability, HMRC will issue a repayment. You should receive a CIS statement from each contractor showing the deductions made.
What is CIS gross status and how do I get it?
Gross payment status means HMRC pays subcontractors their full invoice amount with no CIS deductions. You receive your income gross and pay tax through self-assessment like any other self-employed person. To qualify, sole traders must have a turnover of at least £30,000 per year (excluding materials). Companies need at least £30,000 per director, or £100,000 total turnover. You must also have no serious tax compliance issues, have filed tax returns on time, and have paid tax due on time. Apply through HMRC online or by calling the CIS helpline.
Do I pay CIS on materials as well as labour?
No. CIS deductions only apply to the labour portion of your invoice. Materials, plant hire (where the contractor also provides the operator), and VAT are excluded from the CIS calculation. If your invoice is £5,000 for labour and £2,000 for materials, CIS is calculated only on the £5,000 labour element. At the standard 20% rate, the deduction would be £1,000, not £1,400. It is important to clearly separate labour and materials on your invoices to ensure correct deductions.
What is the domestic reverse charge for construction?
The domestic reverse charge for construction services came into effect on 1 March 2021. Under the reverse charge, the customer (contractor) accounts for VAT rather than the supplier (subcontractor). This means VAT-registered subcontractors do not add VAT to their invoices for most construction services; instead, the contractor accounts for the VAT on their own VAT return. The reverse charge applies to CIS-registered businesses supplying services within the scope of CIS. It was introduced to tackle VAT fraud in the construction sector.
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Mustafa Bilgic

UK Tax Specialist at UK Calculator. Mustafa covers self-employed tax, CIS, IR35 and HMRC compliance, helping contractors and subcontractors in the UK construction industry navigate complex tax rules.