United Kingdom Salary Calculator 2026

Gross-to-net salary calculator for the UK. For employees and self-employed.

Updated for 2026 tax year

Sourced from official government publications

GROSS

Net monthly salary

GBP 2 453

GBP 29 440 / year

81.8% take-home

Effective tax rate

18.2%

of gross salary

Deductions

GBP 547

per month

Net salary 81.8%Tax & contributions 18.2%
DeductionAmountper monthRate
Gross salaryGBP 3 000
INCOME TAX
Income taxGBP 39120.0%
SOCIAL CONTRIBUTIONS
National Insurance (Class 1)GBP 1568.0%
Total deductionsGBP 54718.2%
Net salaryGBP 2 453

Effective rate

18.2%

Marginal rate

28.0%

Tax Brackets

GBP 12 570GBP 50 270
20%
GBP 4 686

Bars show the tax amount paid in each bracket for your current salary. ◄ marks your highest active bracket.

Curious how 3 000 GBP / month compares elsewhere?

See take-home pay across 12 other European countries side by side.

Compare 3 000 GBP across Europe →

Frequently asked questions

The UK uses progressive income tax bands for England, Wales, and Northern Ireland (Scotland has different rates). In 2026/27: the Personal Allowance is £12 570 (tax-free), the basic rate is 20% on income from £12 571 to £50 270, the higher rate is 40% from £50 271 to £125 140, and the additional rate is 45% above £125 140. The Personal Allowance tapers by £1 for every £2 earned above £100 000, reaching £0 at £125 140.

Employees pay Class 1 National Insurance contributions: 8% on earnings between £12 570 and £50 270 (the Primary Threshold to Upper Earnings Limit), and 2% on earnings above £50 270. The 8% rate was reduced from 12% in April 2024 and remains unchanged for 2026/27.

Self-employed individuals pay the same income tax bands as employees. For National Insurance, they pay Class 4 NICs instead of Class 1: 6% on profits between £12 570 and £50 270, and 2% above £50 270. Class 2 NICs were abolished from April 2024. The self-employed NIC rates are lower than employee rates.

For income above £100 000, the £12 570 Personal Allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 of income over £100 000. This creates an effective 60% marginal tax rate between £100 000 and £125 140 (40% income tax + 20% from lost allowance). Above £125 140 the allowance is £0 and the marginal rate drops back to 40% until the additional rate threshold.

For an employee earning £50 000/year, the combined effective rate (income tax + NI) is approximately 24–26%. Income tax is about £7 486 and Class 1 NI is about £3 016, leaving a net of approximately £39 498. The exact amount may vary with student loan repayments and pension contributions.

No. This calculator uses England, Wales, and Northern Ireland income tax bands only. Scotland has its own tax bands (starter, basic, intermediate, higher, advanced, and top rates) set by the Scottish Parliament. National Insurance rates are the same across the UK.

This calculator uses the 2026/27 tax year rates: £12 570 Personal Allowance with taper, the three income tax bands (20%/40%/45%), 8%/2% Class 1 NI for employees, and 6%/2% Class 4 NI for self-employed. It does not include student loan repayments, pension contributions, Scottish tax bands, or marriage allowance transfer.