Take-home pay on £30k, £40k & £50k

What actually lands in your bank each month at three common UK salaries for the 2026/27 tax year, after Income Tax and National Insurance.

These figures use the 2026/27 rates for England, Wales and Northern Ireland, assume a standard tax code, and don't include a workplace pension or student loan (both of which would reduce your take-home further). Scotland's income tax bands differ slightly, so Scottish take-home is a little lower at higher salaries.

£30,000 salary

You keep the first £12,570 tax-free, then pay 20% on the rest. National Insurance is 8% on earnings above £12,570.

Gross salary£30,000
Income Tax−£3,486
National Insurance−£1,394
Take-home (year)£25,120
Take-home (month)≈ £2,093

£40,000 salary

Still entirely within the 20% basic-rate band, so the maths is the same shape — just on a bigger number.

Gross salary£40,000
Income Tax−£5,486
National Insurance−£2,194
Take-home (year)£32,320
Take-home (month)≈ £2,693

£50,000 salary

£50,000 sits just below the £50,270 point where the 40% higher rate begins, so it's still all basic-rate tax — one reason £50k is a common target salary.

Gross salary£50,000
Income Tax−£7,486
National Insurance−£2,994
Take-home (year)£39,520
Take-home (month)≈ £3,293

Why your payslip might differ

Real payslips often show slightly different numbers because National Insurance is worked out per pay period rather than annually, and because most people also have pension contributions, student loan repayments, or a non-standard tax code. A workplace pension in particular can noticeably lower your take-home while quietly building your retirement pot.

Try your exact salary

Want the figure for your salary — including pension, student loan, and your part of the UK? The calculator does it instantly and breaks down every deduction.

→ Open the UK Salary & Tax Calculator

Related reading

UK tax brackets 2026/27 explained · Salary sacrifice explained

General information only, not tax advice. Figures are rounded and based on 2026/27 rest-of-UK rates with a standard tax code, no pension and no student loan. Check GOV.UK or your payslip for your exact figures.