Care workers in the UK are typically paid between the National Living Wage (£12.21/hour) and around £14–£15 per hour depending on the employer and role. At a salary of £24,000, employer NI adds approximately £2,850 per year and minimum pension adds approximately £531. Total employer cost: approximately £27,381 per year before overheads. For domiciliary care, many workers are part-time, further complicating the cost picture.
UK scope. 2025/26 rates. Employer NI at 15% above £5,000, minimum pension 3% on qualifying earnings. Figures are estimates for planning.
| Level | Salary range | Example salary | Employer NI | Min pension | Total cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Care assistant (NLW) | £22,000–£24,000 | £23,810 | £2,822 | £527 | £27,159 |
| Senior care worker | £24,000–£28,000 | £26,000 | £3,150 | £593 | £29,743 |
| Care coordinator | £26,000–£32,000 | £28,000 | £3,450 | £653 | £32,103 |
Total cost = salary + employer NI + pension. No overheads included. 2025/26 rates. Methodology.
£24,000
Gross annual salary at example rate
£2,850
15% above £5,000 secondary threshold
£29,383
Salary + NI + pension + £2,000 overheads
Once you have modelled the cost, you will need payroll software to run the actual pay. These are the most commonly used options for UK employers.
Cloud payroll bundled with Xero accounting. Handles RTI submissions, auto-enrolment and payslip generation. Commonly used by UK small businesses already on Xero for bookkeeping.
See Xero Payroll →Payroll add-on for QuickBooks. Used by UK small employers for PAYE, NI, pension and HMRC RTI. Integrates with QuickBooks accounting.
See QuickBooks Payroll →Long-established UK payroll software with HMRC recognition. Works standalone (without Sage accounting) and is widely used in small businesses and accountancy practices.
See Sage Payroll →HR and payroll platform used by growing UK teams. Combines contracts, onboarding, leave management and payroll in one system. HMRC RTI integrated.
See Employment Hero →UK only. Last reviewed: 04 April 2026. Salary benchmarks are indicative. Employer cost figures use 2025/26 statutory rates. Not financial or legal advice.