#2026/388The Social Security Contributions (Umbrella Companies) Regulations 2026
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These regulations, coming into force on 6th April 2026, establish a framework of joint and several liability for social security contributions involving umbrella companies in the UK. Umbrella companies — intermediary employers that hire out workers to end clients through recruitment agencies — will now be held jointly and severally liable alongside relevant parties for National Insurance Contributions (NICs) where those contributions are not properly paid. The regulations define 'relevant parties' (such as agencies and end clients in the supply chain) who may share liability when an umbrella company fails to meet its NIC obligations. They also address 'purported umbrella companies' — entities that operate as umbrella companies without meeting the formal definition — ensuring they cannot escape liability through technicalities. Amendments are made to four existing sets of regulations: the Social Security (Categorisation of Earners) Regulations 1978 (GB and Northern Ireland versions) and the Social Security Contributions (Intermediaries) Regulations 2000 (GB and Northern Ireland versions), aligning the umbrella company liability framework with existing NIC categorisation and intermediary rules. The regulations apply across Great Britain and Northern Ireland, with the Treasury, HMRC Commissioners, the Secretary of State, and the Department for Communities all holding relevant authority in their respective domains.
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Key Changes
- Effective 6th April 2026, umbrella companies are made jointly and severally liable for unpaid National Insurance Contributions (NICs) alongside other relevant parties in the labour supply chain.
- New category of 'relevant parties' defined — includes recruitment agencies and end-client businesses in the supply chain who can share NIC liability if the umbrella company defaults.
- 'Purported umbrella companies' explicitly brought into scope, closing loopholes where entities operating as umbrella companies could avoid liability by not meeting the strict formal definition.
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