The BMW iX1 is one of the cleanest salary-sacrifice cases in the premium-EV market right now: a genuine BMW-badged electric SUV that a higher-rate taxpayer can run for a net monthly cost well below the headline lease price. This guide shows exactly how the maths works in the 2026/27 tax year, with worked figures for the 20%, 40% and 45% bands, and where the scheme can catch you out. Our short answer: if your employer offers salary sacrifice and you pay 40% or 45% tax, the iX1 eDrive20 is one of the best-value ways into a new BMW you will find.
What the numbers and reviewers say (CDE data)
CDE built the figures below from the published HMRC company-car benefit-in-kind rate for zero-emission cars, current income-tax and National Insurance bands, and the iX1’s UK list pricing, then cross-checked the car against What Car and Carwow road tests. The salary-sacrifice case is strong; the car itself is good rather than flawless, and the firm ride is the main reviewer gripe.
- Where it wins: low 4% benefit-in-kind rate for 2026/27, premium BMW cabin, around 290 miles of claimed range on the eDrive20, scheme costs that bundle insurance and maintenance.
- Where it loses: firm ride on M Sport 20-inch wheels, some hard cabin plastics for the money, real-world range below the longest-legged rivals.
- Tax signal: the benefit-in-kind rate rises in steps after 2026/27, so the gap to a petrol company car is widest now and narrows slightly each year.
How salary sacrifice works, and who actually qualifies
Salary sacrifice means you give up an agreed slice of gross pay in exchange for a fully insured, maintained electric car leased through your employer’s scheme provider. Because the sacrifice comes out before income tax and National Insurance, you only pay tax on a small benefit-in-kind charge instead of the full salary. It is open to most UK PAYE employees whose employer runs a scheme (Octopus EV, Loveelectric, Tusker and others), but there is one hard limit: the sacrifice cannot drop your gross pay below the National Minimum or Living Wage, which rules out lower earners on an expensive car. This is general guidance rather than personal tax advice, so confirm the exact figures with your scheme provider and an accountant for your own salary.

The tax: P11D, the 4% BiK rate and your NI saving
The benefit-in-kind charge is the engine of the saving. It is calculated as the car’s P11D value multiplied by the appropriate percentage for its emissions, multiplied by your marginal income-tax rate. Per HMRC’s published company-car tax tables, the appropriate percentage for a fully electric car is 4% in 2026/27 (checked 30 May 2026). On an iX1 eDrive20 with a P11D of roughly £43,500, that is a taxable benefit of about £1,740 a year. You also save employee National Insurance on the sacrificed amount, at the current NI rates (8% below the upper earnings limit, 2% above it). Scottish taxpayers have their own income-tax bands, so the saving differs north of the border.

Worked example: the iX1 eDrive20 across all three tax bands
The tables below use an illustrative gross sacrifice of £560 a month for an iX1 eDrive20 on a three-year, 10,000-mile-a-year term, inclusive of insurance, maintenance and tyres. Your scheme’s actual quote will differ with term, mileage and provider, so treat these as the shape of the deal, not a promise. Net monthly cost is the gross sacrifice, less the income tax and NI you no longer pay, plus the small benefit-in-kind charge.
| Tax band | Gross sacrifice/mo | Income tax saved/mo | NI saved/mo | BiK cost/mo | Net cost/mo |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 20% basic rate | £560 | £112 | £45 | £29 | around £432 |
| 40% higher rate | £560 | £224 | £11 | £58 | around £383 |
| 45% additional rate | £560 | £252 | £11 | £65 | around £362 |
The pattern is the one that makes salary sacrifice so powerful for senior employees: the higher your tax band, the more you save, because the relief comes at your marginal rate while the benefit-in-kind charge stays tiny. A 45% taxpayer ends up paying less, net, than a basic-rate colleague for the identical car. For a like-for-like view against a bigger BMW EV, our BMW iX salary sacrifice maths runs the same calculation on the flagship.

How the iX1 compares with a personal lease
Against a personal contract hire deal, the salary-sacrifice route usually wins twice over. A personal lease on an iX1 eDrive20 is paid from taxed income and rarely includes insurance, servicing or tyres, so the true monthly cost is higher than the advertised figure once you add cover. The sacrifice version above bundles all of that in and is funded from gross pay, which is why a higher-rate taxpayer can land the same car for a net figure that undercuts the personal lease before insurance is even counted. The trade-off is flexibility: a personal lease is yours to walk from at the end with no employer tie, whereas salary sacrifice is linked to your job. If you are still deciding between routes, our premium EV deposit and finance strategy guide weighs them side by side.

The traps: early exit, rising BiK and what is not included
Three things catch sal-sac drivers out. First, early exit: if you leave your employer mid-term, you may face early-termination protection cover or a charge, so read the scheme’s leaver terms before you sign, especially if your job feels uncertain. Second, the benefit-in-kind rate is not fixed forever; it rises in steps after 2026/27 on the schedule HMRC has published, so your net cost creeps up a little each year even though it stays low by company-car standards. Third, check exactly what the quote includes: most premium schemes bundle insurance, servicing, maintenance and tyres, but home-charging hardware and electricity are usually yours to fund. None of these is a deal-breaker, but they are the difference between a smart decision and a surprise. If you want to weigh a like-for-like alternative, our Polestar 2 salary sacrifice breakdown runs the same numbers on a rival premium EV.
For a sense of how the iX1 drives and where the cabin compromises sit, this independent UK review is a useful watch before you commit to a scheme order.
Where to check the iX1 salary-sacrifice numbers next
Before you place a scheme order, run these checks so the figures hold up for your situation:
- Ask your employer which provider runs the scheme and request a live quote for the iX1 eDrive20 on your preferred term and mileage.
- Confirm the benefit-in-kind rate for the tax year you start in against HMRC’s company-car tables.
- Check the scheme’s leaver and early-termination terms, and whether early-exit protection is included.
- Confirm what the monthly cost covers: insurance, servicing, maintenance, tyres, breakdown, and whether a home charger is included.
- Compare the net figure against a personal lease on the same car with insurance added, using the bands in the table above.
- If you are a Scottish taxpayer, recalculate using the Scottish income-tax bands, because your saving will differ.
Our take
For a higher-rate or additional-rate taxpayer with access to a scheme, the BMW iX1 on salary sacrifice is one of the easiest recommendations in the premium-EV market. We would order the eDrive20 rather than the dual-motor car, because it carries the lowest P11D and the longest range, which is the combination that makes the net monthly figure look so good. We would push on the ride quality before signing, because the firm M Sport setup is the car’s real weakness, and we would read the leaver terms twice if your job feels at all uncertain. Our view is that the tax case is genuinely strong and unlikely to be beaten by a personal lease, but the right buy is the one with a quote you have seen in writing, a benefit-in-kind rate you have checked against gov.uk, and a clear understanding of what happens if you leave.















