England Salary Calculator
Work out your take-home pay in England for the 2025/26 tax year. Includes UK Income Tax bands, National Insurance, pension, and optional student loan.
Your details
£
Take-home£37,720per year
Monthly take-home£3,143
Bi-weekly£1,451
Effective tax rate20.0%
Marginal rate28.0%
Annual breakdown
- Gross income£50,000
- Income tax (England)(14.0%)-£6,986
- National Insurance (Class 1)(5.6%)-£2,794
- Pension contribution(5.0%)-£2,500
- Take-home pay(75.4%)£37,720
Uses HMRC 2025/26 Income Tax bands and Class 1 NI rates. Read full disclaimer.
England tax rates for 2025/26
England uses the UK-wide Income Tax bands (on taxable income, after £12,570 Personal Allowance):
- Basic rate (20%): first £37,700 of taxable income
- Higher rate (40%): £37,701 – £112,570
- Additional rate (45%): over £125,140
The £12,570 Personal Allowance is tapered by £1 for every £2 of income above £100,000, disappearing entirely at £125,140.
National Insurance Contributions
Class 1 Primary (employee) NI for 2025/26:
- Primary Threshold: £12,570 per year (£242/week)
- Main rate: 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270
- Upper rate: 2% on earnings above £50,270
Your employer also pays a separate Class 1 Secondary NI contribution (13.8%) that does not appear on your payslip.
England tax FAQ
What's the difference between England and rest-of-UK tax?
England uses the UK-wide Income Tax bands: Basic (20%), Higher (40%), and Additional (45%). Scotland is the only part of the UK with its own separate Income Tax bands. National Insurance rates are identical across all four nations.
How much take-home pay for a £50,000 salary in England?
For a £50,000 gross salary in England (2025/26, no pension/student loan), your take-home is approximately £38,500 per year. The calculator above gives your exact figure with your specific deductions.
Do I pay NI differently in England?
No. National Insurance (Class 1 Primary) is a UK-wide tax with identical thresholds and rates across England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland: 8% between £12,570 and £50,270, then 2% above £50,270.
Does this calculator include pension salary sacrifice?
Yes. Enter your pension percentage and the calculator treats it as salary-sacrifice-equivalent — reducing both Income Tax and NI liability. For traditional pension contributions taxed-then-relieved, results are very close but slightly different (use HMRC's calculator for formal tax planning).