About the Salary Calculator

Some information about the April 2024 budget figures used to generate the answers displayed in The Salary Calculator:

Income Tax

UK Income Tax
Personal Allowance£12,570
Income Limit£100,000
  
Blindness Allowance£3,070
Married Rebate£1,108.00
  
Tax above personal allowance
£0 - £37,70020%
£37,701 - £125,14040%
over £125,14045%
  
Scottish tax rates
£0 - £2,30619%
£2,307 - £13,99120%
£13,992 - £31,09221%
£31,093 - £62,43042%
£62,431 - £125,14045%
over £125,14048%

The Salary Calculator uses Income tax information from April 2024 to calculate the deductions made on a salary. Taxable income is salary over and above the tax allowance for your circumstances.

From April 2016, tax payers of all ages have the same default tax-free personal allowance of £12,570.

From April 2010, those earning over £100,000 have their personal allowance reduced - by £1 for every £2 they earn over £100,000 until their allowance reaches zero, regardless of age. In the case of this reduction of personal allowance, the reduction is calculated using your adjusted net income, which is your gross income reduced by deductions such as pension contributions or charitable donations.

Your personal allowance may be different from the default, as described in the "Tax Codes" section below.

Blind people get an extra £3,070 on their tax allowance. Married people over the age of 89 receive a tax rebate, after other deductions have been made, of £1,108.00 - although this rebate can be reduced if your income is sufficient, to a minimum of £428.

Any taxable income (i.e. that income above the personal allowance) up to £37,700 is taxed at 20%, from £37,701 to £125,140 is taxed at 40% and taxable income over £125,140 is taxed at the rate of 45%.

From April 2016 the Scottish parliament have been able to set different tax bands from the rest of the UK. If you are resident in Scotland, you will pay 19% on the first £2,306 of income over the personal allowance. From £2,306 to £13,991 the tax rate is 20%. From £13,991 to £31,092 the tax rate is 21%. From £31,092 to £62,430 the tax rate is 42%. From £62,430 to £125,140 the tax rate is 45%. Anything earned over £125,140 is taxed at the maximum 48%.

Tax Codes

The table above right shows the default personal allowance as described in the previous section. However, in some circumstances HMRC may adjust your personal allowance, often because of benefits like a company car or private healthcare. They do this by providing your employer with a tax code which indicates what your personal allowance should be. You can enter this tax code into The Salary Calculator to get a more accurate calculation of your take-home pay.

The usual effect of such an adjustment would be to lower your personal allowance, meaning that you pay tax on more of your income. If you receive benefits such as private healthcare or a company car through your employer, you pay more tax on your salary so that the value of these benefits is also taxed.

Tax codes usually indicate the personal allowance by including a number which is the personal allowance divided by ten. The standard code 1257L indicates a personal allowance of £12,570.

From April 2016, tax codes can start with the letter S, which indicates that you pay the Scottish Rate of income tax. These rates are described in the "Income Tax" section above.

National Insurance

NI code A
Below £242/week0%
£242 - £967/week8%
Above £967/week2%

National Insurance code A is applied to most employees who are not paying into a pension, or if your pension is not "contracted-out". If your gross income (ie before tax) is less than £242 per week, you will make no National Insurance contributions. Gross earnings between £242 and £967 per week are charged at 8%. Any earnings over £967 per week are charged at 2%.

If you are receiving the State Pension, you do not have to pay National Insurance. For the purposes of The Salary Calculator, we have simplified this so that if you tick the "No NI" box, National Insurance Contributions are zero.

From April 2016 it is no longer possible to "contract out" of the second state pension - meaning that the reduced NI code D is no longer applied. If you previously paid band D NI you will pay band A NI from April 2016.

Student Loan

Plan 1
Below £24,9900%
Above £24,9909%
Plan 2
Below £27,2950%
Above £27,2959%
Plan 4
Below £31,3950%
Above £31,3959%
Postgraduate Loans
Below £21,0000%
Above £21,0006%

Student Loans are repaid with different methods depending on when you started the course for which you took out the loan, and where you lived. For undergraduate courses, if you started the course on or after 1st September 2012 and lived in England or Wales, you will repay under "Plan 2". If you lived in Northern Ireland, and/or started the course before 1st September 2012, the loan will be repaid under "Plan 1". If you lived in Scotland, from April 2021 your loan will be repaid under "Plan 4" - prior to April 2021 it was repaid under "Plan 1".

Plan 1 loans are repaid at a rate of 9% on any gross earnings over £24,990 per annum. Plan 2 loans are repaid at a rate of 9% on any gross earnings over £27,295. Plan 4 loans are repaid at a rate of 9% on any gross earnings over £31,395. It is possible to repay under more than one scheme, if you have studied multiple courses. In this case your total deductions are the same as if you had only one loan, but the repayments are split between your loans according to their respective thresholds.

From April 2019, loans for postgraduate study are repaid through a separate Postgraduate Loan plan. These repayments are on top of any Plan 1, Plan 2 or Plan 4 repayments, and are made at a rate of 6% on gross earnings over £21,000 per year.

More information is available on the Student Loan Repayment website.

If you receive childcare vouchers, the gross amount used to calculate Student Loan liability is reduced by the voucher amount (up to the limits described in the Childcare Voucher section below), reducing your repayment amount.

Pension Contributions

The Salary Calculator supports 4 different types of pension. Pension contributions are calculated by deducting the percentage rate you enter into the "Pension" field from your standard salary. You can opt instead to have this calculated on "Qualifying Earnings", which are your earnings between the auto-enrolment thresholds described below. You can also choose to have pension contributions deducted from overtime and bonuses (this happens automatically with auto-enrolment pensions). This is an estimate - each employer calculates "pensionable pay" differently and so it may not exactly match The Salary Calculator. How the pension contribution affects your take-home pay depends on the type of pension you are paying into.

There is an annual limit you can pay into a pension scheme and still get these tax benefits. If you pay more into your pension than this limit, you may be liable for additional tax. The limit is currently £60,000.

Auto-enrolment Pension Schemes

Employers are legally obliged to enrol eligible workers into a pension scheme if they are not in one already. These pension schemes deduct a percentage from your earnings but only between a lower and upper threshold (currently £6,240 and £50,270 respectively). Your earnings include your normal salary and also any overtime payments or bonuses earned.

Employer or Occupational Pension Schemes

You don't pay tax on these pension contributions, so your "taxable income" for Income Tax (see above) is reduced by the amount you pay to your pension. National Insurance contributions used to be reduced if you were paying into a contracted-out pension, but from April 2016 this no longer applies.

Salary Sacrifice Pension Schemes

Increasingly popular, these schemes require you to contractually reduce your salary, with the difference being paid into a pension scheme. Since your salary has been reduced, your income tax, National Insurance and Student Loan contributions are also reduced.

Personal Pension Schemes

If you pay into a personal pension scheme, your employer will deduct income tax and National Insurance as before. However, HMRC will pay into your pension scheme an amount equal to the basic rate (20%) tax on your contribution, effectively giving you the tax back. If you are a higher or additional rate taxpayer, you can claim the extra tax back from HMRC through your tax return.

Childcare vouchers

Your employer might give you the option to receive some of your salary in the form of Childcare Vouchers, which don't attract tax or National Insurance until the tax-free limit is reached. If you pay basic rate tax and/or you joined the voucher scheme before 6th April 2011, this limit is £2,916 per year. If you joined after 6th April 2011 and you pay 40% tax, the tax-free amount is reduced to £1,488 per year, and if you pay 45% tax it is £1,320.

As well as affecting National Insurance and income tax, childcare vouchers affect Student Loan deductions - the gross amount used to calculate Student Loan deductions is reduced by the value of the vouchers taken (up to the limits described above).

Bonuses

Bonuses are typically paid as a one-off extra on top of your usual salary. The calculator works out what extra deductions (tax, National Insurance and Student Loan) will be required that tax year because of this extra payment, and will add these on top of your usual deductions for that month. This can mean that you have very large deductions in a bonus month, but never larger than the bonus itself.

You can choose your normal pay period (e.g. monthly or weekly), to see a comparison of your normal pay period and your bonus pay period.

Some pension schemes would deduct a pension contribution from your bonus - if this is the case, you can tick the "Include bonus" box on the pension tab.

Mortgage Calculations

The Mortgage Repayment Calculator makes some assumptions (such that interest is calculated monthly) to calculate a repayment amount that completes the mortgage after the entered time period has passed. It also does not include any information about building society fees, or variable rates.

For these reasons, The Mortgage Repayment Calculator is intended just to provide a ballpark figure to allow you to get an idea of the costs of different interest rates etc. Care has been taken to try to make these values accurate, but figures from mortgage lendors are likely to differ.