Your employer’s responsibilities
When you start employing people you need to
register as an employer.
As an employer you must:
- deduct tax and contributions from your employees’ wages
- submit your combined employer return, including manpower information
- pay the amount of tax and contributions deducted
- give your employees a written notice of the amounts deducted, tax rate applied and year-end summary
- keep a record of the wages paid and deductions made for 6 years
You have the right to withhold payment of wages until an employee shows you their registration card and photo ID.
Find more information on other employer’s obligations on the
employing staff: step by step guide.
Deducting tax and contributions
You need to deduct tax for:
- full time employees
- part time employees
- contract employees
- Jersey resident directors who get paid a salary or fees
- labour only sub-contractors
You must deduct the correct amount on each pay day, according to that person's valid ITIS rate. The information is then sent to Revenue Jersey on a monthly return.
Tax is taken from the employee’s gross pay. Gross pay is their total salary including:
- overtime pay
- allowances
- commissions
- bonuses
- any other amounts before deductions are made
The tax you deduct from your employees’ salary becomes your liability which you must pay to Revenue Jersey.
Compensation payments for redundancy
There is a tax exemption for the first £50,000 of redundancy or other termination payments. The exemption does not include payments that are remuneration or deferred pay.
Don't deduct tax from compensation payments that are not more than £50,000. If the payment exceeds this sum, only deduct your employee's current effective rate percentage from the remaining balance in excess of the £50,000 exemption.
Tax must be deducted from any other elements of the employee's pay.
Redundancy payments and tax
Contributions
As an employer you must pay Class 1 contributions for employees earning the minimum earnings threshold or more.
Class 1 contributions are made up of the primary and secondary contribution:
- primary contribution must be deducted from your employees’ wages before you pay them
- secondary contribution must be paid by the employer
Find more information on
Class 1 contributions for employers.
Labour only sub-contractors
You don’t have to deduct tax from labour only sub-contractors in the building industry who have an exemption card or good compliance letter. However, they must be included in your combined employer return.
If they don’t have a card, letter or an effective rate, you’ll need to deduct the default rate.
Payment of wages on Jersey Advisory and Conciliation Service (JACS)
Labour only sub-contracting income and tax
Long-term care contributions (LTC)
This deduction is included in your employees' ITIS effective rates. You don’t need to do any additional administration to deduct, declare or pay LTC.
Employees’ ITIS effective rate
Your employee should provide their current Income Tax Instalment Scheme (ITIS) effective rate. This is the percentage of tax you’ll need to deduct from their salary.
If you don't have a rate, you must take the default rate of 22%.
We may also notify you if you don’t use the correct effective rate. This rate must then be used instead of the default rate.
Filing your combined employer returns
You must file your employees' tax, contributions and manpower information on the combined employer return.
You can use our employer return or your own payroll system.
Completing your combined employer return
Find more information on
manpower returns.
What to include on the return
You must send us a return for all:
- employees, including part time and students
- office holders
- directors
- labour-only subcontractors
Your return must include:
- employee's full name
- employee's TIN (Tax Identification Number)
- employee's Social Security number
- employee's earnings (gross salary)
- amounts deducted from employee's earnings for approved superannuation schemes
- the amount of tax deducted and the effective rate applied
- the employment start date for the employee, if in the year
- the employment end date for the employee, if in the year
- exemption number, only for labour-only subcontractors
- social security gross pay
- amount deducted of Class 1 and Class 2 Social Security contributions
- manpower information
Paying your employees' deductions
You must pay the total amount of tax and contributions you deduct 15 days after the end of each month.
You’ll need to make 2 separate payments as tax are paid to the Treasurer of the States and contributions to Social Security.
Find more information on how to
pay employers' ITIS and Class 1 contributions.
Deadlines, late filing and penalties
You must submit the combined employer return 15 days after the end of each month.
Benefits in kind need to be filed by the 15 January in the following year in which the benefit was provided.
Benefits in kind
Late filing
If you don't file your returns on time we'll send you an estimated bill. This will be based on your previous returns or on the best available information.
You must pay the estimated bill immediately.
You have 15 days to appeal against this bill. To settle an appeal and replace the estimate with the correct sum, you must submit the relevant return and pay any amount due.
If you've already paid the balance on the estimate and the amount due on the return is lower, the difference will be held as a credit against the next return.
Penalties
You’ll have to pay a penalty if you don't file your return on time.
If you fail to file your return on time, or do not file your return, you can be taken to court and pay further penalties.
Failure to file a complete and correct return by the deadline | £100 |
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Return still not filed 3 months after deadline | £100 per month, for a maximum of 9 months
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Written notices to employees
You must give your employees written notices of:
- tax and contributions deducted
- ITIS effective rate applied
- year-end summary of deductions made
Year-end summaries must be provided by the end of January of the following year. If the employee stops working for you before the end of the year you must provide the summary when they leave.
Age of employees for tax and contributions
You are not required to deduct tax or contributions from employees who are under the school leaving age and these employees don't get included on your employer's return.
Employees are liable to pay tax and contributions when they reach school leaving age, which is 1 July following the end of year 11.
Contributions must be deducted if the employee earns the minimum earnings threshold or more.
Article 2 of the Education Law on Jersey Law
Changing your employer’s contact details or email
To amend the ITIS or Social Security contact for an employer you need to send a letter with the:
- employer name
- employer code
- employer TIN
- name and details of the new contact, including email, phone, and postal address
The letter must be signed by the owner of the business or the authorised officer of the company such as the company director or secretary.
You can email a scanned copy of the letter to
CER@gov.je or send it by post to
Revenue Jersey (employer customers).
Changing your email address
You can change your email address on the combined employer return by going to the 'your account' section.
If you can't log in, email
CER@gov.je:
- the employer TIN
- user ID
- confirmation of the new email address
Stop employing people
If you stop employing staff you need to send a letter detailing the:
- employer name
- employer code
- employer TIN
- date you stopped employing
The letter has to be signed by the owner of the business or the authorised officer of the company such as the company director or secretary.
You need to include information in the letter
if your business has ceased trading.
You can email a scanned copy of the letter to
CER@gov.je or send it by post to
Revenue Jersey (employer customers).
Redundancy payments
Any redundancy or termination payment is taxable, but the first £50,000 is tax free.
Annual combined employer return filing for certain directors
If you're a director of a company, you might be able to file your combined employer return once a year instead of every month.
You can apply for annual filing if you meet all of the following requirements:
- are a director of a company
- own 25% or more of the ordinary share capital
- are required to deduct ITIS from payments made to you
If you qualify, you'll only be able to file annually for other company employees who meet this criteria.
How to apply
Applications for annual filing must be in writing to
itistax@gov.je and include:
- your name and tax reference (or TIN in known)
- the name and TIN of the company or companies that will be filing annually
- the company's most recent shareholder register
If your application is successful, we'll write to you approving your request. If we don't think you're eligible, we'll tell you why.
The purpose of annual filing is to reduce the amount of paperwork needed to be completed by certain directors.