This was a lords amendment on the National Insurance Contributions (Employer Pensions Contributions) Bill. The bill would bring salary-sacrificed employer pension contributions into National Insurance (NICs) when they exceed an annual cap, with the cap set by regulations. An initial £2,000 cap would apply from 2029, and any amount above the cap would be treated as earnings for NICs purposes (not affecting existing income tax relief). The Treasury would have powers to set and adjust the cap and related rules by regulations, with Parliament supervising those regulations.
• establishes an annual cap on salary-sacrificed employer pension contributions for NICs purposes (initially £2,000, effective from 2029-30), with rules to determine how the cap works across Great Britain and Northern Ireland
• the excess over the cap would be liable to NICs as earnings, while existing pension reliefs and income tax treatment remain unchanged
• the bill relies on secondary legislation to set details (how the cap is calculated, when it starts, and how it applies); some regulatory changes would be subject to parliamentary procedures
• Lords amendments proposed to raise the cap (to £5,000 or higher), uprate it (by CPI/RPI or other measures), allow carry-forward of unused amounts for up to three tax years, and create exemptions for SMEs and charities; there were also proposals on lifetime pension value projections, independent impact reviews, and broader scrutiny
MPs backed a motion to disagree with Lords Amendment 1 to the NICs pension contributions bill, by 280 votes to 161. The bill would bring salary-sacrificed employer pension contributions into National Insurance when they exceed an annual cap, initially set at £2,000 from 2029, with the cap and related rules set by Treasury regulations and Parliament supervising those rules. Three MPs voted against their party whip in this division, showing cross‑party nuance in the issue.
Cross‑party split: 3 MPs voted against their party whipCap-based NICs treatment starts in 2029 at £2,000Treasury power to set cap by regulation, with parliamentary oversightCommons advances its preferred NICs framework
AI-generated context — may contain errors.
Turnout by party
68%
Ulster Unionist Party
1/1 (100%)
Democratic Unionist Party
5/5 (100%)
Traditional Unionist Voice
1/1 (100%)
Your Party
1/1 (100%)
Conservative
86/114 (75%)
Liberal Democrat
54/72 (75%)
Labour (Co-op)
274/401 (68%)
Scottish National Party
6/9 (67%)
What happens next?
The Lords amendment result is sent back to the other House for consideration.
Current stage: Consideration of Commons amendments and / or reasons