A payslip is a written statement of wages and deductions that all UK employers must provide to their employees. Under the Employment Rights Act 1996, every worker — whether salaried, hourly, or agency — is entitled to receive a payslip on or before each payday.

What Must a Payslip Contain?

Since April 2019, itemised payslips are required for all workers, not just employees. The following information must appear:

ElementDescriptionExample
Gross payTotal earnings before deductions£3,200
Variable deductionsEach deduction itemised with amount and purposePAYE £420, NIC £280
Fixed deductionsCan be shown as aggregate with annual written statementPension £96
Net payAmount actually paid to the worker£2,404
Hours workedRequired where pay varies by time worked160 hours

Components of Gross Pay

Gross pay is the starting point for every payslip and includes all forms of remuneration:

  • Basic salary — the contractual fixed amount
  • Overtime — typically at 1.25× or 1.5× the hourly rate
  • Bonuses and commissions — performance-related payments
  • Statutory paymentsSSP , SMP , SPP
  • Benefits in kind — company car, private medical, etc. (reported on P11D )

Standard Deductions

Mandatory Deductions

Deduction2024/25 RateBasis
PAYE income tax20% / 40% / 45%Earnings above personal allowance (£12,570)
Employee NIC8% Class 1Earnings between £12,570 and £50,270
Student loanPlan 1: 9% over £22,015Threshold depends on plan type

Voluntary Deductions

Accounting for Payslips

Each payslip underpins the monthly payroll journal entry :

AccountDebitCredit
Salary expense£3,200
Employer NIC£380
Employer pension£96
Net pay (bank)£2,404
PAYE liability£420
NIC liability (employee + employer)£660
Pension liability£192

The employer must report these figures to HMRC in real time via RTI each pay period.

Year-End Documents

Payslips feed into the key annual documents employers must issue:

DocumentPurposeDeadline
P60Summary of total pay and deductions for the tax year31 May
P11DBenefits in kind and expenses6 July
P45Issued when an employee leavesOn leaving date

Common Payslip Errors

ErrorImpactFix
Wrong tax codeOver/underpayment of PAYEContact HMRC for corrected code
Missing overtimeUnderpayment — potential NMW breachRecalculate and pay arrears
Incorrect pension rateUnder-contribution — auto-enrolment breachCorrect and backdate contributions
Omitted student loanEmployee builds arrears with SLCApply correct plan type deduction

Employees who spot errors should raise them with their employer immediately. If unresolved, they can contact ACAS or make a claim to an employment tribunal.

Record Retention

Employers must keep payroll records — including copies of payslips — for a minimum of 3 years after the end of the tax year they relate to (HMRC requirement). In practice, many employers retain records for 6 years to cover potential HMRC investigations and employment tribunal claims.

Employees should retain their payslips as evidence for self-assessment tax returns, mortgage applications, and pension queries.