Common NHS Mixed Income Structures
NHS + Private Practice
- • NHS consultant role (PAYE)
- • Private clinic sessions
- • Private hospital work
- • Insurance examinations
NHS + Medical-Legal
- • NHS substantive post
- • Expert witness work
- • Medico-legal reports
- • Court appearances
Multiple Streams
- • NHS employment
- • Private practice
- • Locum work
- • Teaching/Training
- • Research grants
Tax Structure Options Comparison
| Structure | NHS Pension Eligible | Tax Treatment | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sole Trader Direct invoicing as individual | ❌ | Income Tax + NI | Simple setup, low income |
| Limited Company Incorporated business | ❌ | Corp Tax + Dividend Tax | Higher income, tax efficiency |
| Partnership With other practitioners | ❌ | Income Tax on profit share | Shared expenses, equipment |
| LLP (Limited Liability Partnership) Professional partnership | ❌ | Income Tax on profit share | Large practices, limited liability |
Pension Strategy with Mixed Income
Annual Allowance Management
NHS Pension Growth
NHS pension growth counts towards your £60,000 annual allowance. This includes:
- • Automatic employer contributions
- • Your employee contributions
- • Benefit improvements (salary increases, promotions)
- • Additional voluntary contributions (AVCs)
Private Practice Pension Contributions
Private income pension contributions also count towards annual allowance:
- • SIPP contributions from private practice profits
- • Executive pension schemes
- • Stakeholder pension contributions
Limited Company Tax Strategies
Optimal Salary Strategy
2026/27 Optimal Director Salary
Pay salary at National Insurance threshold to maintain NI credits while minimising tax:
Dividend Tax Efficiency
2026/27 Dividend Tax Rates
Tax-Deductible Business Expenses
Professional Costs
- • GMC registration fees
- • Royal College memberships
- • Professional indemnity insurance
- • CPD courses and conferences
Equipment & Technology
- • Medical equipment
- • IT equipment and software
- • Office furniture and supplies
- • Website and marketing
Travel & Premises
- • Home office costs
- • Travel between sites
- • Clinic rental costs
- • Utility bills (business portion)
Common Annual Allowance Scenarios
Scenario 1: Conservative Strategy
NHS Employment
- • NHS pension growth: £45,000
- • No additional AVCs
- • Focus on career progression
Private Practice
- • SIPP contribution: £15,000
- • Total annual allowance used: £60,000
- • No tax charges
Scenario 2: High Growth Year
NHS Employment
- • NHS pension growth: £70,000 (promotion)
- • Exceeds annual allowance by £10,000
- • Consider Scheme Pays
Private Practice
- • No additional pension contributions
- • Use carry forward if available
- • Plan future contributions carefully
Scenario 3: Tapered Allowance
High Total Income
- • Combined income over £260,000
- • Reduced annual allowance
- • Complex tax planning required
Strategy Options
- • Salary sacrifice arrangements
- • Timing of private practice income
- • Spouse pension contributions
Income Smoothing & Tax Planning
Timing Strategies
- •Invoice Timing: Control when private income is received across tax years
- •Expense Timing: Accelerate deductible expenses in high-income years
- •Pension Contributions: Time large contributions to manage annual allowance
Corporate Strategies
- •Profit Retention: Retain profits in company for lower tax years
- •Dividend Planning: Optimise dividend payments across tax years
- •Equipment Investment: Use annual investment allowance effectively
Documents to gather before modelling private income
NHS payslips, P60s, and Pension Savings Statements so pension growth and tapering are not treated separately from private income.
Private practice invoices, remittance statements, clinic costs, secretary fees, room fees, medical indemnity, and billing platform fees.
Company, partnership, or sole-trader records, including dividends, director salary, pension contributions, and retained profit.
Professional subscriptions, GMC/royal college fees, mileage, CPD, equipment, and any mixed-use expenses to discuss with your accountant.
Official sources
Use these official references alongside this guide. Rules and rates can change, so check the underlying source before making decisions.
GOV.UK Income Tax rates
Current UK income tax bands and rates for salary, self-employment, and pension planning.
GOV.UK Self Assessment
Official entry point for tax returns, deadlines, and registration.
GOV.UK tapered annual allowance
HMRC guidance on threshold income and adjusted income for pension tapering.
NHS England GP contract hub
Contractual context for GP and NHS England arrangements.
FCA finding an adviser
Consumer guidance on choosing regulated financial advice.
Continue your planning journey
These related guides cover the next questions that usually come up after this topic.
Professional Advice Strongly Recommended
Mixed income strategies can be complex and have significant long-term financial implications. Consider professional guidance from:
- • Specialist medical accountants familiar with NHS pension rules
- • Independent financial advisers with healthcare sector experience
- • Tax specialists for complex annual allowance planning
- • Legal advice for partnership and incorporation structures
Plan Your Mixed Income Strategy
NHS Financial Planner includes tools to model different income structures, calculate optimal pension contributions, and plan your tax strategy across NHS and private income streams.