Take Home Pay Calculator UK – Calculate Take Home Pay (2025/26 Tax Year)

A Take Home Pay Calculator UK helps employees estimate their net salary after deductions like income tax and National Insurance. By entering your gross salary and tax code, you can quickly see how much money you actually receive each month. This ‘tool‘ is essential for budgeting, financial planning, and understanding your true earnings. Learn how a UK take home pay calculator simplifies salary calculations and helps you manage your finances more effectively.

Take Home Pay Calculator UK 2025/26 | Free Net Salary Estimator
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Take Home Pay Calculator UK

2025/26 UK tax year – England, Wales & Northern Ireland

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Blind Person’s Allowance Adds £2,870 to your personal allowance
Marriage Allowance (receiving) Adds £1,260 to your personal allowance
Annual Take-Home Pay
— monthly  |  — weekly
Income Tax
Nat. Insurance
Effective Rate
Full Annual Breakdown
Proportional Breakdown
Disclaimer: Results are estimates for guidance only. They assume a standard tax code applied to your full salary. Always confirm figures with HMRC or a qualified tax adviser.

What Is Take-Home Pay?

Take-home pay, also called net pay or net salary is the amount deposited into your bank account after your employer has made all the required statutory deductions from your gross salary. In the United Kingdom, these deductions are primarily Income Tax, Class 1 National Insurance contributions, and, where applicable, student loan repayments and workplace pension contributions.

Understanding the difference between your gross and net pay is fundamental to Personal Financial Planning. Whether you are negotiating a new job offer, deciding how much to save each month, or simply trying to understand your payslip, knowing your take-home figure gives you a realistic picture of your disposable income.

🔑 Key Formula

Gross Salary − Income Tax − National Insurance − Pension − Student Loan = Take-Home Pay

Your gross pay is the headline figure quoted in a job offer or employment contract. However, because the UK operates a Pay As You Earn (PAYE) system, your employer automatically calculates and deducts the appropriate taxes on your behalf before transferring your net pay. This means most employees never need to complete a self-assessment tax return unless they have additional income sources.

Deductions are calculated on a cumulative basis across the tax year, which runs from 6 April to 5 April in the United Kingdom. Each pay period, your payslip reflects a proportion of your annual tax and NI liability, adjusted to ensure you pay broadly the right amount throughout the year.

How Our Take Home Pay Calculator UK Works

Our free UK salary calculator uses the latest 2025/26 HMRC rates and thresholds to provide an accurate estimate of your net pay. Here is exactly how the calculation is performed:

  1. 1

    Enter Your Gross Income

    Input your salary as an annual, monthly, weekly, or hourly figure. The calculator converts all inputs to an annual gross salary as the starting point for all deductions.

  2. 2

    Determine Your Personal Allowance

    The standard 2025/26 Personal Allowance is £12,570. Your tax code (usually 1257L for the standard allowance) tells your employer how much you can earn before Income Tax applies. The allowance tapers above £100,000 and is fully withdrawn at £125,140.

  3. 3

    Calculate Income Tax

    Income Tax is charged progressively on your taxable income (gross pay minus personal allowance). The Basic Rate (20%) applies up to £50,270; the Higher Rate (40%) between £50,271 and £125,140; and the Additional Rate (45%) above that. Scottish residents pay slightly different rates across six bands.

  4. 4

    Calculate National Insurance

    Employee Class 1 NI is charged at 8% on earnings between the Primary Threshold (£12,570) and the Upper Earnings Limit (£50,270), then at 2% above that. NI is not charged on pension contributions made via salary sacrifice.

  5. 5

    Deduct Pension & Student Loan

    Workplace pension contributions (typically 5% employee, 3% employer under auto-enrolment) are deducted from gross pay, reducing your taxable income. Student loan repayments are calculated as 9% of earnings above your plan’s repayment threshold.

  6. 6

    Show Your Net Pay

    The remaining figure after all deductions is your annual take-home pay. The calculator also displays monthly and weekly equivalents, your effective tax rate, and a full visual breakdown of where your money goes.

Understanding Your Payslip Deductions

£12,570
Personal Allowance 2025/26
£50,270
Basic Rate tax band upper limit
20%–45%
Income Tax rate range
8%
Standard NI rate for employees

Income Tax

Income Tax is the largest deduction for most UK employees. It is levied by HMRC on your taxable income, your gross earnings minus your Personal Allowance and any qualifying reliefs. The system is progressive, meaning higher earners pay a greater proportion of their income in tax. Crucially, you only pay the higher rate on the income that falls within that band, not on your entire salary.

For example, on a salary of £60,000 in England, you would pay 20% on earnings between £12,571 and £50,270, and 40% only on the slice between £50,271 and £60,000 not 40% on everything.

National Insurance Contributions

National Insurance (NI) funds the UK’s state pension, NHS, and other social security benefits. As an employee, you pay Class 1 National Insurance. Since April 2024, the main employee rate was cut to 8% (down from 10%) on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, with 2% applying to earnings above the Upper Earnings Limit. Your employer also pays Class 1 NI on your behalf, but this does not affect your take-home pay directly.

Pension Contributions

Under UK auto-enrolment legislation, eligible workers must be enrolled in a workplace pension scheme. The minimum combined contribution is 8% of qualifying earnings, at least 3% from your employer and 5% from you. Pension contributions made through salary sacrifice reduce your gross pay before tax and NI are applied, providing a more tax-efficient outcome than relief-at-source arrangements.

Increasing your pension contribution is one of the most effective legal ways to reduce your tax bill, particularly if you are close to the 40% tax threshold.

Student Loan Repayments

Student loan repayments are collected via PAYE once your salary exceeds the relevant repayment threshold for your plan. The repayment rate is 9% of earnings above the threshold for Plans 1, 2, 4 and 5. Postgraduate loans carry a 6% repayment rate on earnings above £21,000. Repayments are not tax-deductible but are automatically handled by your employer through HMRC instructions.

UK Take-Home Pay by Salary – 2025/26 Examples

The table below illustrates estimated annual take-home pay for a range of gross salaries in England and Wales for 2025/26, assuming a 1257L tax code, 5% pension contribution, and no student loan.

Gross Annual SalaryIncome TaxNational InsurancePension (5%)Net Annual PayNet Monthly PayEffective Tax Rate
£20,000£1,486£596£1,000£16,918£1,4107.4%
£25,000£2,486£996£1,250£20,268£1,6899.9%
£30,000£3,486£1,396£1,500£23,618£1,96811.6%
£35,000£4,486£1,796£1,750£26,968£2,24712.8%
£40,000£5,486£2,196£2,000£30,318£2,52713.7%
£50,000£7,486£2,996£2,500£37,018£3,08515.0%
£60,000£11,432£3,196£3,000£42,372£3,53119.1%
£75,000£17,432£3,496£3,750£50,322£4,19423.2%
£100,000£27,432£3,996£5,000£63,572£5,29827.4%

* Estimates only. Actual figures may vary based on tax code, pension scheme type, and other individual circumstances.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to the most common questions about UK take-home pay, salary deductions, and payslip calculations.

UK take-home pay is your gross salary minus Income Tax, National Insurance contributions, pension contributions, and any Student Loan repayments. HMRC collects tax via the PAYE system, so your employer deducts the right amount each pay period automatically.
The standard Income Tax Personal Allowance for 2025/26 is £12,570. You pay no Income Tax on earnings up to this amount. For incomes above £100,000, the allowance reduces by £1 for every £2 earned over that threshold, reaching zero at £125,140.
Employee Class 1 NI for 2025/26 is 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% on earnings above £50,270. There is no NI on earnings below the Primary Threshold of £12,570.
Yes. The Scottish Parliament sets its own Income Tax rates and bands for Scottish taxpayers. Scotland has six bands in 2025/26; Starter (19%), Basic (20%), Intermediate (21%), Higher (42%), Advanced (45%), and Top (48%) compared to three bands in the rest of the UK.
Salary sacrifice reduces your gross pay before Income Tax and National Insurance are calculated. For example, if you sacrifice £2,000 into your pension, you pay tax and NI on £2,000 less of income. This is more tax-efficient than contributing from net pay and can meaningfully increase your take-home figure.
Plan 1 covers loans for courses started before September 2012. Plan 2 covers England and Wales courses starting after September 2012. Plan 4 covers Scottish students. Plan 5 applies to new English undergraduate borrowers from 2023 onwards. Postgraduate loans are a separate category with a 6% repayment rate.
Differences can arise from a non-standard tax code, employer-specific benefits (such as a company car, private medical insurance, or childcare vouchers), overtime, bonuses, or other taxable benefits in kind. This calculator provides estimates based on standard assumptions and your inputs.
Your effective tax rate is the average rate of tax you pay across your entire income i.e. total tax paid divided by gross salary. It is always lower than your marginal rate (the rate on your highest slice of income) because the lower bands are taxed at lower rates. It is a useful measure for comparing tax burdens across different income levels.

Free take-home pay estimates for the 2025/26 UK tax year.

Rates based on HMRC published thresholds for England, Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland.