4 March 2026 · Landolio Team

Self-Employed Sick Pay UK 2026: What Benefits Can You Claim?

There's no Statutory Sick Pay for self-employed people. If you can't work, you don't earn. That's the brutal reality — but you're not completely without options. Here's what's available and how to protect yourself.


Why There's No SSP for Self-Employed

Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) is paid by employers to employees. Since you're your own boss, there's nobody to pay it. HMRC doesn't provide an equivalent for sole traders or freelancers.

This is arguably the biggest financial risk of being self-employed — and the one most people ignore until it's too late.


What You CAN Claim

1. Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)

If you've been paying Class 2 National Insurance, you may qualify for New Style ESA (contributory). This is the closest thing to sick pay for the self-employed.

You'll need a fit note (sick note) from your GP after 7 days. For the first 7 days you self-certify.

2. Universal Credit

If you don't qualify for New Style ESA, you may be able to claim Universal Credit. However:

3. Personal Independence Payment (PIP)

If you have a long-term health condition or disability, PIP is available regardless of your employment status. It's not income replacement — it's to help with extra costs of living with a condition.


Income Protection Insurance

This is the real answer for self-employed people. Income protection insurance pays a monthly amount (typically 50-70% of your income) if you're unable to work due to illness or injury.

How It Works

What It Costs

For a 30-year-old freelancer earning £35,000:

Costs vary based on your age, health, occupation, and whether you smoke. Desk-based freelancers pay less than manual workers.

Is It Worth It?

Consider this: could you survive 3 months with no income? If the answer is no, income protection isn't optional — it's essential. It's arguably more important than life insurance if you don't have dependants.

Read our full guide: Income Protection Insurance for Freelancers


Building Your Own Safety Net

Even with insurance, every self-employed person should have:

Emergency Fund

Aim for 3-6 months of essential expenses in an easy-access savings account. This covers the gap before insurance kicks in and handles situations insurance doesn't cover.

Diversified Income

Don't rely on one client or one type of work. Build:

Outsourcing Plan

Know someone who could cover your most important client work if you were off for a month? Having a trusted colleague on standby — even informally — is invaluable.


What to Do If You're Ill Right Now

  1. Get a fit note from your GP (after 7 days of illness)
  2. Apply for New Style ESA online at GOV.UK — do this immediately, there's a waiting period
  3. Check if Universal Credit applies — especially if you have low savings
  4. Contact your clients — be honest, give a timeline, suggest cover if possible
  5. Check your insurance policies — if you have income protection, critical illness, or even certain bank account benefits
  6. Claim on any relevant insurance — some business bank accounts include basic sick pay cover

Tax Implications


Key Numbers

BenefitWeekly AmountMeans-Tested?Taxable?
New Style ESAUp to £90.50NoYes
Universal CreditVariesYesNo
PIP (standard daily)£72.65NoNo
PIP (enhanced daily)£108.55NoNo

The Bottom Line

Self-employed sick pay doesn't exist — but income protection insurance + emergency fund + NI contributions gives you a solid safety net. The cost of income protection is small compared to the cost of having no income for months.

Don't wait until you're ill to sort this out. Get your cash flow in order, build an emergency fund, and look into income protection today.


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