New online service for voluntary contributions goes live
If you have gaps in your NI history, you can pay voluntary contributions to increase your entitlement to certain benefits, e.g. the state pension. You can now do this online. How do you access the new service?
If you have an incomplete contribution record for a particular tax year, you will receive a statement advising you of the position, usually about 20 months after the end of the year in question. The statement will also show the amount of voluntary contributions required to complete the contributions record for that year. This could be worthwhile if it is unlikely that future contributions from earnings will give you a full state pension, e.g. if you’re close to retirement age. If you're unsure whether an incomplete record exists for a previous year, you can check your contributions record via your personal tax account. HMRC has extended the deadline for making up any contributions shortfall as voluntary contributions can now be paid (at 2022/23 rates) by 5 April 2025 in respect of any years from 2006/07 to 2017/18.
The new service allows you to check whether paying Class 3 contributions is likely to increase your state pension entitlement, make a payment with an immediate confirmation, and is digital from end to end, i.e. you no longer need to contact HMRC for a reference number.
Related Topics
-
Timetable for agent multi-factor authentication rollout published
HMRC has published further details of its plans to introduce multi-factor authentication (MFA) for tax agents. The rollout is intended to strengthen security across HMRC's online services and will be introduced in stages over the coming months. What do you need to know?
-
HMRC clarifies treatment of averaging relief under MTD IT
HMRC has updated its guidance to explain how averaging relief claims will operate under Making Tax Digital for Income Tax (MTD IT). The clarification addresses concerns about how farmers and creators will claim relief once quarterly reporting becomes mandatory. What has changed?
-
VAT cut for children's holiday activities over summer
The government has announced a temporary reduction in the rate of VAT applying to certain children's holiday activity programmes during the summer holidays. The measure is intended to help families with childcare costs during the school break. What has changed?

This website uses both its own and third-party cookies to analyze our services and navigation on our website in order to improve its contents (analytical purposes: measure visits and sources of web traffic). The legal basis is the consent of the user, except in the case of basic cookies, which are essential to navigate this website.