UK Income Tax Calculator 2026/27: Calculate Your Take-Home Pay
By Wealthvieu
·
Updated March 16, 2026
Use our income tax calculator to work out your take-home pay for 2026/27. Enter your gross salary to see a full breakdown of income tax, National Insurance, and your net pay.
Table of Contents
2026/27 Income Tax Bands
Band
Taxable Income
Rate
Personal Allowance
£0–£12,570
0%
Basic Rate
£12,571–£50,270
20%
Higher Rate
£50,271–£125,140
40%
Additional Rate
Over £125,140
45%
The Personal Allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 earned above £100,000, creating an effective 60% tax rate between £100,000 and £125,140.
For a detailed breakdown of each band, see our income tax bands guide.
National Insurance Rates 2026/27
Employee Contributions (Class 1)
Earnings
NI Rate
Below £12,570 (Primary Threshold)
0%
£12,570–£50,270 (Basic Rate Band)
8%
Above £50,270
2%
Employer Contributions
Earnings
NI Rate
Below £5,000 (Secondary Threshold)
0%
Above £5,000
15%
Self-Employed (Class 4)
Profits
NI Rate
Below £12,570
0%
£12,570–£50,270
6%
Above £50,270
2%
For more on National Insurance, see our National Insurance guide .
Income Tax Calculation Examples
Example 1: £30,000 Salary
Component
Calculation
Amount
Gross salary
£30,000
Personal Allowance
£12,570 × 0%
£0
Basic Rate tax
£17,430 × 20%
£3,486
Total income tax
£3,486
Employee NI
£17,430 × 8%
£1,394
Total deductions
£4,880
Take-home pay
£25,120
Take-home (monthly)
£2,093
Effective tax rate
16.3%
Example 2: £50,000 Salary
Component
Calculation
Amount
Gross salary
£50,000
Personal Allowance
£12,570 × 0%
£0
Basic Rate tax
£37,430 × 20%
£7,486
Total income tax
£7,486
Employee NI
£37,430 × 8%
£2,994
Total deductions
£10,480
Take-home pay
£39,520
Take-home (monthly)
£3,293
Effective tax rate
21.0%
Example 3: £80,000 Salary
Component
Calculation
Amount
Gross salary
£80,000
Personal Allowance
£12,570 × 0%
£0
Basic Rate tax
£37,700 × 20%
£7,540
Higher Rate tax
£29,730 × 40%
£11,892
Total income tax
£19,432
Employee NI
£37,700 × 8% + £29,730 × 2%
£3,611
Total deductions
£23,043
Take-home pay
£56,957
Take-home (monthly)
£4,746
Effective tax rate
28.8%
Example 4: £125,000 Salary
Component
Calculation
Amount
Gross salary
£125,000
Personal Allowance
Reduced to £640 (tapered)
—
Basic Rate tax
£37,700 × 20%
£7,540
Higher Rate tax
£86,660 × 40%
£34,664
Total income tax
£42,204
Employee NI
£37,700 × 8% + £74,730 × 2%
£4,511
Total deductions
£46,715
Take-home pay
£78,285
Take-home (monthly)
£6,524
Effective tax rate
37.4%
The 60% Tax Trap (£100,000–£125,140)
When you earn between £100,000 and £125,140, your Personal Allowance is tapered away. This creates an effective marginal rate of 60%:
Component
Rate
Income tax (Higher Rate)
40%
Loss of Personal Allowance (extra tax)
20%
National Insurance
2%
Effective marginal rate
62%
How to Avoid the 60% Trap
Strategy
How It Helps
Pension contributions
Reduces taxable income below £100,000
Salary sacrifice
Lowers gross pay below threshold
Gift Aid charitable donations
Extends the basic rate band
Defer bonuses
If possible, spread income across tax years
Scottish Income Tax Rates 2026/27
Scotland has its own income tax bands:
Band
Taxable Income
Rate
Personal Allowance
£0–£12,570
0%
Starter Rate
£12,571–£14,876
19%
Basic Rate
£14,877–£26,561
20%
Intermediate Rate
£26,562–£43,662
21%
Higher Rate
£43,663–£75,000
42%
Advanced Rate
£75,001–£125,140
45%
Top Rate
Over £125,140
48%
Scottish taxpayers pay more at higher incomes but slightly less at lower incomes compared to the rest of the UK.
How to Reduce Your Tax Bill
Strategy
Details
Maximise pension contributions
Full tax relief; reduces taxable income
Use your ISA allowance
£20,000/year tax-free — see ISA guide
Marriage Allowance
Transfer £1,260 to spouse (saves up to £252)
Salary sacrifice
Childcare vouchers, cycle to work, pension
Claim work expenses
Flat rate allowances or actual costs
Tax-free savings interest
£1,000 (basic rate) or £500 (higher rate) PSA
Key Tax Dates 2026/27
Date
Deadline
6 April 2026
New tax year begins
31 July 2026
2nd payment on account for 2025/26
5 October 2026
Register for Self Assessment if newly self-employed
31 October 2026
Paper Self Assessment deadline
31 January 2027
Online Self Assessment deadline for 2025/26
31 January 2027
1st payment on account for 2026/27
5 April 2027
Tax year ends
Bottom Line
Understanding your income tax and National Insurance is essential for financial planning. Use the calculations above to estimate your take-home pay, and look into pension contributions and ISAs to reduce your overall tax burden.
For more on UK taxes, see our guides on National Insurance , capital gains tax , and dividend tax .