Dividend tax is the income tax UK individuals pay on dividends received from companies, ranging from 0% under the dividend allowance to 39.35% at the additional rate. The allowance has shrunk dramatically — from £5,000 in 2017-18 to just £500 in 2024-25 — pushing many private-company shareholders and casual investors into self assessment for the first time.

Rates and allowances

The first slice of dividends each year sits within the dividend allowance and is tax-free. Above that, dividends are taxed at three rates that mirror your overall income tax band.

Band2024-25 rateTrigger
Personal allowance0%First £12,570 of total income
Dividend allowance0%First £500 of dividends above PA
Basic-rate dividend8.75%Up to £37,700 of taxable income
Higher-rate dividend33.75%£37,701 to £125,140
Additional-rate dividend39.35%Above £125,140

Dividends are taxed after non-savings and savings income, meaning the rate often jumps mid-dividend if your salary already pushes you into the higher band.

Reporting and paying

How you report depends on the size of your dividend income.

Annual dividendsReporting route
Less than £500No tax due, no reporting needed
£500 to £10,000HMRC PAYE coding adjustment or self assessment
Over £10,000Self assessment compulsory
Closely held (PSC) shareholdingSelf assessment regardless of size

Tax is due by 31 January following the tax year, with payments on account if your bill is over £1,000.

Sheltering dividends from tax

For shareholders who have flexibility over how shares are held, several wrappers reduce or remove dividend tax entirely.

  • ISAs — dividends inside a Stocks and Shares ISA are tax-free up to £20,000 invested per year
  • Pensions (SIPP) — dividends inside a SIPP are tax-free; contributions get tax relief
  • Spouse share transfer — gifts to a spouse use both £500 allowances and lower bands
  • Reduce salary, increase dividend — see our dividend tax for directors article for the company-side angle
  • Time disposals around 6 April to use two tax years’ allowances
  • Check scrip dividends versus cash dividends for tax treatment

Closing thoughts

The dividend allowance freeze means more shareholders need to file each year — start gathering vouchers and broker reports as soon as the tax year ends. Pair this with our self-assessment tax return guide, the limited company vs sole trader article, and the year-end checklist . Cross-check current rates on GOV.UK dividend tax . See pricing for tools that produce dividend vouchers in seconds.