On a £30,000 salary, your take-home pay in 2025/26 is £25,119.60 per year — that’s £2,093.30 per month or £483.07 per week, after income tax and National Insurance. These figures assume the standard tax code 1257L, no pension contributions, and no student loan. Use our free salary calculator to model your exact situation including pension, student loans, and tax code.
£30,000 After Tax: Full 2025/26 Breakdown
Here is a complete summary of what you earn and what you keep on a £30,000 salary in the 2025/26 tax year:
| Annual | Monthly | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Salary | £30,000.00 | £2,500.00 | £576.92 |
| Income Tax | −£3,486.00 | −£290.50 | −£67.04 |
| National Insurance | −£1,394.40 | −£116.20 | −£26.81 |
| Take-Home Pay | £25,119.60 | £2,093.30 | £483.07 |
Gross Salary is your full pay before any deductions — the number on your job offer or contract.
Income Tax is the amount deducted by HMRC based on your taxable earnings. On £30,000, you pay £3,486 in income tax for the year — roughly £290.50 per month.
National Insurance (NI) is a separate deduction that funds state benefits such as the NHS and State Pension. On £30,000, your NI contribution is £1,394.40 per year — around £116.20 per month.
Take-Home Pay is what actually lands in your bank account after both deductions. At £30,000, that is £25,119.60 annually, or £2,093.30 each month.
How Income Tax Is Calculated on £30,000
HMRC uses a banded system. For 2025/26, the rates and thresholds are:
- Personal Allowance: £12,570 — you pay no income tax on this portion
- Basic Rate (20%): applies to earnings between £12,571 and £50,270
- Higher Rate (40%): applies to earnings above £50,270
- Additional Rate (45%): applies to earnings above £125,140
On a £30,000 salary, the maths works out as follows:
- Deduct the Personal Allowance: £30,000 − £12,570 = £17,430 taxable income
- All £17,430 falls within the Basic Rate band, so: £17,430 × 20% = £3,486 income tax
Because £30,000 sits well within the Basic Rate band, you pay 20% on your taxable income and no more. You would only enter the 40% Higher Rate band if your salary exceeded £50,270.
National Insurance on £30,000
Class 1 National Insurance is paid by employees on their earned income. The 2025/26 rates are:
- 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270
- 2% on earnings above £50,270
On a £30,000 salary, the calculation is straightforward:
- Earnings above the NI threshold: £30,000 − £12,570 = £17,430
- NI due: £17,430 × 8% = £1,394.40 per year (£116.20/month)
None of your £30,000 salary falls above the £50,270 upper earnings limit, so the 2% rate does not apply. Your total NI bill for the year is £1,394.40.
What Affects Your Take-Home Pay?
The figures above assume a standard tax code and no additional deductions. In reality, several factors can change what you actually receive — sometimes significantly.
Pension contributions reduce your taxable income, meaning you pay less tax and NI while building retirement savings. On a £30,000 salary, the effect is meaningful. At a 3% contribution (£900/year), your take-home falls to roughly £24,591 per year, but your pension receives £900 and your tax and NI savings offset a portion of that cost. At 5% (£1,500/year), take-home is around £24,159; many employers match this contribution, effectively doubling your pension input at no extra cost. At 8% (£2,400/year), take-home drops to approximately £23,511, but this is one of the most tax-efficient ways to build long-term savings.
Student loan repayments are another common deduction. The threshold and rate depend on which plan you are on. On a £30,000 salary: Plan 1 (threshold £24,990) costs roughly £452 per year (£37.67/month) at 9% above the threshold; Plan 2 (threshold £27,295) costs roughly £243 per year (£20.25/month); Plan 5 (threshold £25,000) costs roughly £450 per year (£37.50/month).
Your tax code tells your employer how much tax-free income you are entitled to. The standard code for most people is 1257L, which reflects the £12,570 Personal Allowance. If your code is wrong — for example an emergency code like BR (taxed at 20% on all earnings) or 0T (no personal allowance at all) — you could be meaningfully overpaying each month. It is always worth checking your payslip and contacting HMRC if anything looks off.
Salary sacrifice schemes allow you to swap part of your salary for non-cash benefits, reducing your gross pay and therefore your tax and NI liability. Common schemes at this salary level include childcare vouchers, the Cycle to Work scheme (saving up to £1,000 on a bike and equipment), and electric vehicle leasing through an employer’s EV scheme, which can generate substantial savings on both tax and day-to-day running costs.
Use our take-home calculator to model all of these instantly.
Is £30,000 a Good Salary in the UK?
£30,000 is a meaningful and widely earned salary in the UK — it sits clearly in the solid middle ground of UK earnings. According to ONS data, the median UK full-time salary is approximately £35,000 in 2025, placing £30,000 somewhat below the median but still ahead of a large proportion of the working population, particularly those in part-time or lower-skilled roles.
Roles that commonly pay around £30,000 include newly qualified teachers in England and Wales, NHS Band 5 nurses in their first years of practice, experienced administrators and office managers across most industries, and mid-level roles in retail management, customer services, and logistics. It is also typical for early-career positions in finance, HR, and marketing after two to four years of experience.
From a cost-of-living perspective, a monthly take-home of £2,093 goes a long way in much of the UK. In cities like Liverpool, Hull, Coventry, or Belfast, this income comfortably covers rent, bills, food, and transport, with room to save. In Birmingham, Leeds, or Edinburgh the picture is positive but tighter, particularly for those renting alone. In London and the wider South East, £2,093 per month after tax is challenging — typical one-bedroom rents frequently exceed £1,500 per month in the capital, making shared housing the most practical option on this income.
Hourly, Daily, Weekly Breakdown
Based on a standard 37.5-hour working week and 52 weeks per year (260 working days):
| Period | Gross | Net (After Tax) |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly (37.5hr week) | £15.38 | £12.88 |
| Daily (7.5hr day) | £115.38 | £96.61 |
| Weekly | £576.92 | £483.07 |
| Monthly | £2,500.00 | £2,093.30 |
| Annual | £30,000.00 | £25,119.60 |
These figures are rounded to the nearest penny. Your actual net hourly or daily rate may vary slightly depending on the number of days worked, public holidays, and any variable pay such as overtime or bonuses.
Get Your Exact Take-Home Figure
Every person’s tax situation is unique. Your take-home pay can differ from the figures above if you have a non-standard tax code, make pension contributions, repay a student loan, or use salary sacrifice schemes. Use our free salary calculator to get your exact figure — including all deductions, salary sacrifice, student loans, and tax code adjustments. More detailed than any other UK calculator.