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Tax Code K200 Explained

K code — £2,000 is added to your taxable income (typically reflecting company car benefit, medical insurance or underpaid tax).

At a glance — K200

Personal Allowance
−£2,000 (addition to taxable income)
Region
UK-wide (rUK / Wales)
Cumulative?
Yes
Code type
K code (addition)

What does K200 mean?

You have income that is not being taxed another way and it is worth more than your tax-free allowance. The number is added to your taxable income rather than deducted.

Your taxable income is increased by £2,000 to account for untaxed benefits.

How much tax will you pay on K200?

Annual income tax HMRC would deduct on 2025-26 rates for a range of salaries, assuming the full year on this code. National Insurance is additional and the same across the UK.

Annual salary England / Wales / NI — income tax Effective rate Take-home (pre-NI)
£20,000 £4,400 22.0% £15,600
£30,000 £6,400 21.3% £23,600
£50,000 £13,260 26.5% £36,740
£80,000 £25,260 31.6% £54,740
£100,000 £33,260 33.3% £66,740

For Scottish / rUK side-by-side, or to model your own salary, student loan and pension contributions, use the tax code checker.

Should you be on tax code K200?

K codes are correct when HMRC needs to collect more tax than your Personal Allowance shelters — typically company car benefit, medical insurance, state pension or underpaid tax from a previous year. If the code looks high relative to your benefits in kind, request a P2 coding notice from HMRC and check the detail.

Related tax codes

Check your own code: enter any HMRC tax code into the free tax code checker — it decodes the letters and number, shows your Personal Allowance, and estimates your take-home using 2025-26 or 2026-27 rates.

For the full plain-English guide to every UK tax code letter, prefix and suffix, see UK Tax Codes Explained 2026-27.

Sources

Tax code rules from gov.uk/tax-codes. Income tax rates from HMRC. Effective tax figures computed live from central configuration — correct for 2025-26.

Last updated 3 May 2026Tax year 2025-26

Data sources: HMRC (gov.uk/hmrc)

This tool is general information only, not financial advice.

Reviewed by UK Tax Tools Editorial Desk

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