About the apprenticeship levy
The apprenticeship levy is a levy on UK employers, designed to fund growth in the government’s apprenticeship programme. The apprenticeship levy came into effect on 6 April 2017.
Employers have an allowance of £15,000 to offset against their levy liability. The levy allowance is not a cash payment. The terms of the allowance mean that only UK employers with an annual wage bill of more than £3 million are liable to pay the levy.
The levy is at a rate of 0.5% of an employer’s total pay bill, where there is employer National Insurance (NI) liability and where total wages stand at more than £3 million for the full year. For example, an employer with an annual wage bill value of £3,000,200.00 will pay (£3,000,200*0.5%) - £15000 = £1. An annual wage bill of anything less than £3,000,200.00 will result in a levy of £0 at month twelve because of rounding rules.
The calculation is on a monthly cumulative basis (like a tax calculation), so employers receive an apprenticeship allowance of £1,250 per month. If the value in the first month does not exceed £1,250, nothing is due. If the cumulative value at month two still does not exceed £2,500, nothing is due again and so on.
Levied employer |
Non-levied employer |
Employer of 250 employees, |
Employer of 100 employees, |
Single employers with multiple PAYE schemes have only one allowance. Connected employers may share one allowance between employers.
You can find more information about the apprenticeship levy at https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/apprenticeship-levy-how-it-will-work