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Marriage tax allowance allows you to transfer 10% of your unused personal allowance (the amount you can earn tax-free each tax year), to your spouse or civil partner, if they earn more than you.

Marriage Allowance Tax Refund Explained

This scheme was first introduced by the UK Goverment in April 2015. It’s main purpose is to help married couples and civil partners to reduce the amount tax they pay annually. It is applicable to those couples where one partner earns less than the other, or was in fact unemployed. The lower earning partner essentially agrees to transfer 10% of their personal allowance to the higher earning partner.

The 10% is equivalent to £1,250 for tax year 2019/20 , annually which is transferred to the higher earning partner. In Other words, it would reduce the higher paying partner taxable income by £1,250, reducing their annual tax paid by £250, and a tax refund for overpayment in tax for the past 4 years worth over £1,000 as long as the civil partnership existed over the period. HMRC accepts claims that go back 4 years.



Click Here To Apply For Marriage Tax Allowance

Transferring Personal Allowance

Currently, the annual tax-free personal allowance is £12,500. This means that a person is not charged tax for the first £12,500 they earn. Marriage tax allowance therefore allows the First 12,500 their unused allowance to the higher earning partner.


Click Here To Apply For Marriage Tax Allowance

Are you eligible for a refund?

You will not automatically be refunded for the extra tax you have paid together as a couple, if you do not take the initiative to put forward a claim. 

Where a claim has not been made, the government holds on to the extra funds and do not notify you of this allowance.



Click Here To Apply For Marriage Tax Allowance

What are the steps to recover your tax from HMRC?


Click Here To Apply For Marriage Tax Allowance