HomeUber Eats Tax Calculator
Free — No Signup — HMRC 2025/26

Uber Eats Tax Calculator UK 2025–26

2025–26 Tax Summary — Uber Eats

Uber Eats drivers are self-employed and pay income tax at 20% and Class 4 NI at 6%. On £28,000 gross income: approximately £921 NI + £2,886 income tax = £3,807 total tax. Set aside £952 per quarter. Car mileage: 45p/mile. Register for Self Assessment if earnings exceed £1,000.

Est. annual tax
£3,807
Quarterly payment
£952
Mileage rate
45p/mile car (first 10,000)

Estimate your income tax and National Insurance as an Uber Eats driver in 60 seconds. Car mileage at 45p/mile, correct Class 4 NI at 6%. Free, no signup.

Calculate Your Tax Estimate
£

Total paid to you by the platform before any deductions.

£

Phone, equipment, insurance — business proportion only.

Your Tax Estimate — 2025/26
Gross income
Mileage claimed
Other expenses
Taxable profit
Income Tax
Class 4 NI (6%)
Total tax owed
Net take-home
Set aside monthly
Effective rate
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Uber Eats drivers

How Uber Eats Drivers Are Taxed

Uber Eats delivery partners are self-employed and must complete a Self Assessment tax return if earnings exceed £1,000 per year. You pay income tax at 20% on taxable profits between £12,570 and £50,270, plus Class 4 NI at 6%. Class 2 NI was abolished from April 2024.

Most Uber Eats drivers use a car or motorbike. HMRC's Approved Mileage Rate is 45p per mile by car for the first 10,000 business miles, then 25p. By motorbike it is 24p per mile.

HMRC rates 2025/26

Tax Bands & NI Rates

Income bandIncome TaxClass 4 NI
Up to £12,5700%0%
£12,571 – £50,27020%6%
£50,271 – £125,14040%2%
Above £125,14045%2%

Class 2 NI abolished April 2024. Class 4 reduced from 9% to 6% April 2024.

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Uber Eats drivers pay 20% income tax on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, and 6% Class 4 NI on the same range. Below £12,570 profit, no tax is owed.
HMRC allows 45p per mile by car for the first 10,000 business miles, then 25p. By motorbike the rate is 24p per mile throughout.
Yes, if your earnings exceed £1,000 in a tax year. The registration deadline is 5 October following the end of that tax year.
You can claim mileage, phone costs (business proportion), insulated delivery bags, vehicle insurance, parking fees, and accountant fees.

Estimates based on HMRC 2025/26 rates. General guidance only — not financial, tax, or legal advice.

Your actual liability may differ. Consult a qualified accountant for personalised advice. Verify rates at gov.uk.

EB
Written & reviewed by
Ethan Blake
Small Business Tax & Compliance Expert
Tax compliance specialist since 2017. Helped 5,000+ freelancers and self-employed workers navigate HMRC Self Assessment and UK gig economy tax rules.
Last reviewed: Self Assessment — GOV.UK →