Being self-employed in the UK offers freedom, flexibility, and the potential for higher earnings — but it also means navigating financial complexity that employed people never face. According to HMRC, there are approximately 4.3 million self-employed workers in the UK as of 2025, representing around 13% of the workforce. Unlike employees, the self-employed have no employer paying their National Insurance, no workplace pension contributions, no sick pay, no holiday pay, and no predictable monthly income. Every financial safety net that employees take for granted must be self-built. The IPSE (Association of Independent Professionals and the Self-Employed) found that 31% of self-employed workers have no pension provision, 44% have less than three months of expenses in emergency savings, and 52% have experienced at least one month of zero or near-zero income in the past two years. These statistics reveal a population that's working hard but financially vulnerable. The self-employed need to save more aggressively than employees — not less — because they're covering their own safety nets entirely.
How much should self-employed people save for tax?+
Set aside 25-30% of every payment received into a separate tax savings account. This covers income tax, Class 2 and Class 4 National Insurance, and provides a buffer for payments on account.
Do self-employed people get a pension?+
Self-employed workers are not auto-enrolled into workplace pensions and must arrange their own. Options include SIPPs, stakeholder pensions, and Nest. Only 18% of self-employed workers currently save into a pension.
How big should a self-employed emergency fund be?+
At minimum six months of essential expenses, with twelve months recommended. Self-employed workers face greater income volatility and have no statutory sick pay or redundancy rights to fall back on.
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