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Mr American in Britain is getting to grips with UK taxes and aims to get savvy quickly, before the tax man takes more than his fair share.I’ve been troubled by taxes recently. We all grumble about high taxes and not having enough left over to live on, so I won’t go there. But I’m still trying to understand what taxes are taken out and how.
I suppose I’m lucky that my employer takes out the taxes for me. It’s the same in the US when you work for a company. And it looks relatively simple – they take out PAYE and NI. NI, or National Insurance, is kind of like Social Security and PAYE (Pay As You Earn) is all the other taxes.
I don’t recall if they ever asked about my marital status. Unlike the US, they don’t have ‘exemptions’, where you claim for yourself and all your dependents, and your taxes vary according to this. However, they do allow for a certain amount of your pay to be tax-free.

I still cannot get used to being paid monthly. Of course, it’s been only two months. And the way they worked out the monthly pay was extremely baffling until I called them and they ran through it with me. They did admit it was a bit strange, but they felt it was the fairest way. So, even if I work more days one month, I may get less pay. It made it difficult to understand the taxation as well.
I had worked out my taxes using calculators on the internet and the figures there differed from each other as well as my actual taxes. I’m not sure whether to be pleased or worried because it’s more in one and less in the other (NI versus PAYE that is).
The other part of taxes that has me worried is filing. In the US, you’re supposed to file, because sometimes you owe money and sometimes you’re due a refund, for various reasons. Over here, it seems that most people aren’t required to file because their taxes should already be taken out correctly. It’s only if you receive income from more than one source, if you have business-related expenses that you want to claim, or if you are self-employed that you have to file.
Then there’s the question of Child Tax Credits. I believe I qualify for this, but do I claim for it by filing taxes? Is this similar to exemptions for dependents in the US?
Visit An American in Britain for more of Mr and Mrs American in Britain's fresh – if not always rosy – perspective on Merry Olde England and, from time to time, advice for those venturing over from across the pond. Because "let’s just say, I’ve made some mistakes along the way."
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