The National Insurance Contributions Act 2022 (Application of Part 1) Regulations 2022
PART 1Introductory provisions
Citation, commencement and interpretation1.
(1)
These Regulations may be cited as the National Insurance Contributions Act 2022 (Application of Part 1) Regulations 2022 and come into force on 6th April 2022.
(2)
In these Regulations—
“the Act” means the National Insurance Contributions Act 2022;
“mariner” has the meaning given in regulation 115 of the SSCR;
PART 2Zero-rate secondary Class 1 contributions for freeport employees who are mariners
Application of this Part2.
This Part applies to any employment of a person as a mariner where secondary Class 1 contributions are payable in respect of earnings at the secondary percentage as modified by regulation 119 of the SSCR.
Application of section 1 of the Act (zero-rate contributions for employees at freeport tax sites: Great Britain)3.
Section 1 of the Act is to be treated as applying in relation to contributions payable in respect of a tax week in the tax year 2022-23 or any subsequent tax year only when—
(a)
that tax year has ended, and
(b)
all contributions payable in respect of a tax week in that tax year have been paid.
Modification of freeport conditions4.
(1)
Section 2 of the Act (freeport conditions) has effect as if—
(a)
“(d)
60% or more of the earner’s employed time during that qualifying period was spent in a single freeport tax site in which the employer had business premises for the duration of that period.”,
(b)
in subsection (3)(b) “(subject to subsection (4)(d))” were omitted, and
(c)
subsection (4)(d) were omitted.
PART 3Zero-rate secondary Class 1 contributions for certain armed forces veterans
Application of this Part5.
This Part applies to—
(a)
any employment of a person as a mariner where secondary Class 1 contributions are payable in respect of earnings at the secondary percentage as modified by regulation 119 of the SSCR,
(b)
(c)
any employment in relation to which Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs have allowed the employed earner to defer payment of certain primary Class 1 contributions for the purpose of not exceeding the annual maximum in regulation 21 of the SSCR, and
(d)
any employment of an employed earner who has attained pensionable age and is not liable to pay primary Class 1 contributions by virtue of section 6(3) of either of the 1992 Acts.
Application of section 6 of the Act (zero-rate contributions for armed forces veterans)6.
Section 6 of the Act is to be treated as applying in relation to contributions payable in respect of a tax week in the tax year 2022-23 or any subsequent tax year only when—
(a)
that tax year has ended, and
(b)
all contributions payable in respect of a tax week in that tax year have been paid.
These Regulations specify types of employments for which the reliefs provided to employers on secondary Class 1 National Insurance contributions (“NICs”) in Part 1 of the National Insurance Contributions Act 2022 only apply after the end of the tax year.
Part 1 provides for citation, commencement and interpretation.
Part 2 relates to the employer NICs relief for freeport employees in Great Britain and provides that the relief is only available after year end, once all contributions have been paid, in respect of mariners for whom secondary Class 1 contributions are paid at the reduced rate for mariners.
Part 3 relates to the employer NICs relief for armed forces veterans and provides that relief is only available after year end, once all contributions have been paid, in respect of—
mariners for whom secondary Class 1 NICs are paid at the reduced rate for mariners,
married women and widows who have elected to pay primary Class 1 NICs at the reduced rate,
employees who have been allowed by Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs to defer payments of primary Class 1 NICs for that employment for the purpose of their payments not exceeding the annual maximum amount of NICs,
employees over pensionable age who are not liable to pay primary Class 1 NICs.
A Tax Information and Impact Note covering this instrument was published on 12th May 2021 alongside the National Insurance Contributions Bill (in session 2021 to 2022) and is available on the website at https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/national-insurance-contributions-bill-2021. It remains an accurate summary of the impacts that apply to this instrument.