‘By 2031 almost every officer will be a higher tax payer’

3 MIN READ

PUBLISHED 05 Dec 2025

IN News

The Government’s decision in the Autumn Budget to freeze income tax and National Insurance thresholds until 2031 paints a bleak picture for police officers, says Cambridgeshire Police Federation.

New analysis from the Police Federation of England and Wales (PFEW) has revealed that the Government’s decision in the Autumn Budget to freeze income tax and National Insurance thresholds until 2031 will pull virtually the entire police workforce into the 40 per cent tax band within six years.

In response to the findings, branch secretary Kevin Misk says this news only confirms what members have been saying for years – ‘they are being squeezed from every direction’.

“Our members are working longer hours, facing greater demand and carrying higher risks – yet they are taking home less money. It is completely unsustainable,” said Kevin.

He highlighted that the situation is even worse for Cambridgeshire officers because, unlike their counterparts in neighbouring forces, they do not receive the South East Allowance:

“Let’s be clear, forces around us, including Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire and others closer to London, receive the South East Allowance to help offset the huge cost of living pressures in this region,” Kevin continued, adding: “Cambridgeshire officers get none of that support – and yet we face exactly the same financial challenges. Officers living and working here are being left behind.”

The change comes despite more than a decade of below-inflation pay rewards which have meant that police pay is now worth 20 per cent less in purchasing power than it was in 2010. 

Even though they are finding it harder and harder to make ends meet, officers – even those at the lowest ranks – now face having to pay 40 per cent income tax on some of their salary instead of 20 per cent.

So-called ‘fiscal drag’ has created a stealth-tax spiral that will swallow future pay awards and accelerate the financial pressures already driving the Police Federation’s Copped Enough campaign which calls for officers to be properly compensated for the toll that protecting society takes on them.

Kevin said: “Our members are being hit twice: once by the stealth tax, dragging them into the higher-rate band, and again by the fact that they receive no regional allowance to help soften the blow. 

“The Government cannot continue to ignore the reality of what it costs to live and work in Cambridgeshire.”

Key findings from the Federation’s new analysis

Kevin further warned that the Force is already seeing experienced officers leaving the service early because they simply cannot make the numbers work for their families. 

“This stealth-tax approach will only accelerate that trend”,  he added, ending: “The Government cannot keep relying on officer goodwill while eroding their financial stability. Cambridgeshire deserves a police service that is properly supported – and that starts with fair pay for the people who keep our communities safe.”