Wage Calculator 2026/27

Wage Calculator

✓ Verified for 2026/27

Your Pay Rates

£
Annual Net Pay
£24,500
after tax & NI
Monthly Net Pay
£2,042
net ÷ 12
Weekly Net Pay
£471
net ÷ 52
Hourly Net Pay
£12.56
effective net rate

Annual Breakdown

Gross Annual Salary £29,250
Income Tax £3,336
National Insurance £1,334
Annual Take-Home Pay £24,580
Net Pay 84%
Tax 11%
NI 5%
Period Gross Pay Income Tax National Insurance Net Take-Home
Annual
Monthly
Weekly
Daily
Hourly
ℹ️ Hourly rates assume 52 working weeks per year. Calculations incorporate standard Personal Allowance and employee National Insurance rates for the selected region.

How We Calculated This

  1. Input base earnings: Start with gross salary (annual, monthly, weekly, or hourly wage rate).
  2. Deduct qualifying pre-tax items: Deduct workplace pension contributions (under net pay arrangements) and salary sacrifice schemes.
  3. Apply Personal Allowance: Apply the standard 2026/27 personal allowance of £12,570 (adjusted downward by £1 for every £2 when earnings exceed £100,000).
  4. Calculate progressive Income Tax: Compute tax at the basic rate (20%), higher rate (40%), and additional rate (45%) based on HMRC bands.
  5. Calculate employee National Insurance (NICs): Apply the Class 1 NI rate of 8% above the Primary Threshold (£12,570) up to the Upper Earnings Limit (£50,270), and 2% on remainder.

Real-World Examples

Example 1: Gross Salary of £35,000 (Standard Personal Allowance)

A typical UK salary calculation with no pension or student loan deductions.

Gross annual salary: £35,000
- Personal allowance: £12,570
= Taxable income: £22,430

Income tax (20% of £22,430): £4,486
National Insurance (8% on (£35,000 - £12,570)): £1,794.40

Total deductions: £6,280.40
Take-home pay: £28,719.60 per year
Example 2: Gross Salary of £55,000 (Higher Rate Threshold)

Calculation illustrating crossing into the 40% higher rate tax band.

Gross annual salary: £55,000
- Personal allowance: £12,570
= Taxable income: £42,430

Basic rate tax (20% of £37,700): £7,540
Higher rate tax (40% of (£42,430 - £37,700)): £1,892
National Insurance:
- 8% on band (£50,270 - £12,570): £3,016
- 2% on band (£55,000 - £50,270): £94.60

Total deductions: £12,542.60
Take-home pay: £42,457.40 per year
Example 3: Gross Salary of £120,000 (Tapered Personal Allowance)

Showing the 60% marginal tax rate area due to personal allowance taper.

Gross annual salary: £120,000
- Personal allowance reduction: (£120,000 - £100,000) / 2 = £10,000
= Remaining personal allowance: £2,570
= Taxable income: £117,430

Basic rate tax (20% of £37,700): £7,540
Higher rate tax (40% of (£117,430 - £37,700)): £31,892
National Insurance:
- 8% on band (£50,270 - £12,570): £3,016
- 2% on band (£120,000 - £50,270): £1,394.60

Total deductions: £43,842.60
Take-home pay: £76,157.40 per year

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the personal allowance for the 2026/27 tax year?

The standard UK personal allowance for 2026/27 is £12,570. You do not pay any income tax on earnings below this threshold unless your total income exceeds £100,000.

How does the personal allowance taper work above £100k?

For every £2 you earn above £100,000, your personal allowance is reduced by £1. This means if you earn £125,140 or more, your personal allowance is reduced to zero.

What are the income tax bands and rates for 2026/27?

For England, Wales, and Northern Ireland: the basic rate is 20% (on taxable income up to £37,700), the higher rate is 40% (on taxable income between £37,701 and £125,140), and the additional rate is 45% on income above £125,140.

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About This Calculator

This calculator uses the latest HMRC rates for the 2026/27 tax year. For illustrative purposes only — always consult a qualified tax adviser for formal advice.