UK Salary Calculator — All Tools & Calculators

Looking for a specific UK tax or salary calculator? You're in the right place. From take-home pay and bonuses to IR35, dividends, and stamp duty — all our free 2025/26 calculators are here in one place.

Your Complete UK Salary & Tax Solution

SalaryCal provides free, easy-to-use calculators for the UK tax system. Whether you're an employee, contractor, or self-employed professional, our tools help you understand your take-home pay, tax obligations, and financial planning.

All calculators are updated for the 2025/26 tax year with the latest HMRC rates and thresholds. Use SalaryCal to compare job offers, plan tax strategies, or simply check how much you'll take home after tax and deductions.

Take-Home Pay Calculator

Wondering what your salary looks like after tax? Enter your annual salary and instantly see your monthly and weekly take-home pay after income tax, National Insurance, student loan, and pension deductions for 2025/26.

deductions.

How to use this calculator
Your salary
£
Student loan
Monthly take-home
£0.00
Annual Monthly Weekly Daily
Gross salary - - - -
Income tax - - - -
National Insurance - - - -
Student loan - - - -
Pension - - - -
Take home - - - -
Tax breakdown

Hourly Wage Calculator

Know your hourly rate but not sure what that works out to as an annual salary or monthly take-home? Enter your rate and hours below and we'll do the full breakdown after tax and National Insurance.

How to use this calculator
Hourly rate
£
Student loan
Monthly take-home
£0.00
Net hourly: -
Annual Monthly Weekly Daily
Gross salary - - - -
Income tax - - - -
National Insurance - - - -
Student loan - - - -
Take home - - - -

Required Salary Calculator

Know what you want to take home each month but not sure what salary you need to earn? Enter your desired net pay and we'll work out the gross salary required before tax and NI.

How to use this calculator
Desired take-home
£
Required gross salary
£0.00
Annual Monthly
Gross salary - -
Income tax - -
National Insurance - -
Student loan - -
Take home - -

Two Jobs Tax Calculator

Taking on a second job and wondering how it'll affect your tax? See how HMRC splits your personal allowance and National Insurance across two employers — and what your combined take-home will actually be.

How to use this calculator
Job 1 — Primary employment
£
Job 2 — Secondary employment
£
Combined monthly take-home
£0.00
Job 1 Job 2 Combined
Gross salary - - -
Income tax - - -
National Insurance - - -
Take home - - -

Compare Two Salaries

Been offered a new job and wondering if the salary is actually worth it? Enter your current salary and the new offer side by side to see the real difference in monthly take-home pay after tax and NI.

How to use this calculator
Salary A
£
Salary B
£
Salary A Salary B Difference
Gross salary - - -
Income tax - - -
National Insurance - - -
Net annual - - -
Net monthly - - -

Compare Tax Years

Noticed your pay has changed but can't work out why? Use the tax year comparison calculator to see exactly how the April 2025 budget changes affect your take-home on the same salary.

How to use this calculator
Your salary
£
Year 1 Year 2 Difference
Income tax - - -
National Insurance - - -
Net annual - - -
Net monthly - - -

National Insurance Breakdown

Not sure how your National Insurance is calculated? See a full breakdown of your Class 1 contributions as an employee — or Class 2 and Class 4 if you're self-employed — based on your 2025/26 income.

How to use this calculator
Your income
£
Annual NI contributions
£0.00
Annual Monthly Weekly

Tax Code Checker

Got a tax code on your payslip and not sure what it means? Enter it below and we'll explain it in plain English — including what personal allowance you're getting and whether it looks right.

How to use this calculator
Your tax code
Your salary (optional)
£

Enter a tax code above to see the explanation.

Pension Contribution Calculator

Want to know how much of your salary is going into your pension — and what you'll have by retirement? Enter your contributions and we'll show you the tax relief you're getting and a projection of your pot.

How to use this calculator
Your details
£
Projected pension pot
£0
Monthly Annual
Your contribution - -
Employer contribution - -
Tax relief - -
Net cost to you - -
Total going into pension - -

Dividend Tax Calculator

Paying yourself through dividends? Find out how much tax you'll owe in 2025/26, including the £500 dividend allowance and how your dividends combine with any PAYE income to affect your tax band.

How to use this calculator
PAYE salary
£
Dividend amount
£
Dividend tax owed
£0.00
Amount
Total income (salary + dividends) -
Dividend allowance used -
Basic rate (8.75%) -
Higher rate (33.75%) -
Additional rate (39.35%) -
Total dividend tax -
Net dividends received -

Bonus Tax Calculator

Just been told you're getting a bonus? Don't get caught out — find out exactly how much income tax and National Insurance will be deducted before it hits your account. Enter the amount below to see your real take-home.

How to use this calculator
Base salary
£
Bonus amount
£
Net bonus received
£0.00
Without bonus With bonus On bonus
Gross - - -
Income tax - - -
National Insurance - - -
Take home - - -

Maternity & Sick Pay Calculator

Had to take time off work for illness, maternity, or paternity leave? Enter your details below and the calculator will estimate how your pay is affected — including Statutory Maternity Pay and Statutory Sick Pay for 2025/26.

How to use this calculator
Pay type
Average weekly earnings before tax
£
Total entitlement
£0.00

Pro-rata / Furlough Calculator

Changing to part-time hours, or has your pay been reduced? Use the pro-rata calculator to see your adjusted salary and take-home. You can also enter a percentage of your full salary if your pay has been cut.

How to use this calculator
Full-time equivalent salary
£
Your pro-rata take-home (monthly)
£0.00
Annual Monthly
Full-time salary - -
Pro-rata gross - -
Income tax - -
National Insurance - -
Take home - -

Overtime Pay Calculator

Picking up extra shifts and wondering what you'll actually take home? Enter your hours and overtime rate multiplier to see your net overtime pay after income tax and National Insurance.

How to use this calculator
Base annual salary
£
Net overtime pay (monthly)
£0.00
Annual Monthly
Base salary - -
Hourly rate -
Gross overtime - -
Tax on overtime - -
NI on overtime - -
Net overtime - -

Pay Rise Impact Calculator

Been offered a pay rise but want to know how much extra you'll actually see each month? Enter your current and new salary to see the real difference after HMRC takes their cut.

How to use this calculator
Current salary
£
New salary
£
Extra monthly take-home
£0.00
Current New Change
Gross salary - - -
Income tax - - -
National Insurance - - -
Monthly take-home - - -

Statutory Redundancy Pay Calculator

Been made redundant and want to know what you're entitled to? Enter your age, years of service, and weekly pay to calculate your statutory redundancy payment under UK law.

How to use this calculator
Statutory redundancy pay
£0

Sole Trader vs Limited Company

Trying to decide between going sole trader or setting up a limited company? Enter your expected income and see the difference in take-home pay, tax, National Insurance, and Corporation Tax for 2025/26.

How to use this calculator
Annual profit / revenue
£
Sole Trader Ltd Company
Profit - -
Income tax - -
NI contributions - -
Corporation tax - -
Dividend tax - -
Accountancy - -
Take home - -

IR35 Calculator

Unsure whether IR35 will hit you hard? See exactly how much take-home pay you'd lose by falling inside IR35 compared to operating outside — so you can make an informed decision about your contracts.

How to use this calculator
Day rate
£
Inside IR35 Outside IR35
Gross revenue - -
Employer NI - -
Income tax - -
Employee NI - -
Corporation tax - -
Dividend tax - -
Annual take home - -
Effective tax rate - -

Self Assessment Tax Estimator

Self-employed or earning outside of PAYE? Estimate your Self Assessment tax bill for 2025/26 — including payments on account — so you're not caught short when the deadline hits.

How to use this calculator
Total Self Assessment bill
£0.00
Amount
Total taxable income -
Income tax -
Class 2 NI -
Class 4 NI -
Total tax bill -
1st payment on account (31 Jan) -
2nd payment on account (31 Jul) -
Save per month -

Contractor Day Rate to Salary Converter

Working as a contractor and wondering how your day rate stacks up against a permanent salary? Enter your rate and we'll convert it into an equivalent annual salary — so you can compare like for like.

How to use this calculator
Day rate
£
Equivalent annual salary
£0
Amount
Day rate -
Working days per year -
Gross annual -
Income tax -
National Insurance -
Annual take home -
Monthly take home -

Mortgage Repayment Calculator

Thinking about buying a home or switching mortgage? Enter the loan amount, interest rate, and term to see your monthly repayments, total interest paid, and full repayment schedule.

How to use this calculator
Mortgage details
Monthly payment
£0.00
Amount
Loan amount -
Monthly payment -
Total repaid -
Total interest -
Amortisation

Stamp Duty Calculator

Buying a property in England or Northern Ireland? Find out exactly how much Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) you'll pay in 2025/26 — including whether you qualify for first-time buyer relief.

How to use this calculator
Property price
£
Total stamp duty
£0
Band Rate Tax
Effective rate: 0%

Student Loan Repayment Tracker

Wondering how long you'll be paying off your student loan — and how much you'll actually repay in total? Enter your salary and loan plan type to see your monthly deductions and projected payoff date.

How to use this calculator
Loan details
Monthly repayment
£0.00
Amount
Monthly repayment -
Annual repayment -
Total repaid -
Written off -
Repayment period -
Balance projection

Debt Consolidation Calculator

Juggling multiple credit cards, loans, or store cards and struggling to keep up? Add all your outstanding debts and the calculator will show you whether consolidating into one loan could reduce your monthly payments and total interest.

How to use this calculator
Your current debts
Consolidated loan
-
Current debts Consolidated
Total balance -
Monthly payment - -
Total cost - -

Tax Guides & Financial Tips

Not sure how UK tax works or whether you're paying the right amount? Browse our practical guides on income tax, PAYE, self-assessment, and salary planning — written in plain English, no jargon.

Tax

Understanding UK Income Tax Bands in 2025/26

February 2025 · 5 min read

The UK income tax system uses a progressive structure where different rates apply to different portions of your income. For 2025/26:

  • Personal Allowance: £12,570 tax-free
  • Basic Rate (20%): £12,571 to £50,270
  • Higher Rate (40%): £50,271 to £125,140
  • Additional Rate (45%): Over £125,140

If your income exceeds £100,000, your personal allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 earned above that threshold. This creates an effective 60% marginal rate between £100,000 and £125,140.

Scotland has different rates

Scottish residents pay six rates: Starter (19%), Basic (20%), Intermediate (21%), Higher (42%), Advanced (45%), and Top (48%). Use the Scotland toggle in our take-home calculator to see the difference.

Reducing your tax bill

Salary sacrifice pension contributions lower your taxable income. For higher-rate taxpayers, this represents significant savings. Try different contribution rates in the calculator to see the impact.

Student loans

Student Loan Repayment Plans Explained

February 2025 · 7 min read

A breakdown of how UK student loan repayments work in 2025/26:

Plan 1 (pre-2012 courses)

Repay 9% of income above £24,990/year. Written off at age 65.

Plan 2 (post-2012, England & Wales)

Repay 9% of income above £27,295. Written off 30 years after first due to repay.

Plan 4 (Scotland)

Repay 9% above £31,395. The higher threshold means lower monthly repayments.

Plan 5 (post-2023, England)

Repay 9% above £25,000. Written off after 40 years — the longest period.

Postgraduate loans

Repaid at 6% above £21,000, independently of any undergraduate loan. You can be making repayments on two loans simultaneously.

Use our student loan tracker to project how long your loan will take to repay.

NI

National Insurance 2025/26: What You Need to Know

February 2025 · 4 min read

National Insurance funds the State Pension and other benefits. For employees in 2025/26:

  • Primary Threshold: £12,570/year — no NI below this
  • Main Rate: 8% on £12,570 to £50,270
  • Upper Rate: 2% above £50,270

The 8% rate was introduced in April 2024 after being cut from 12% in two stages — the biggest NI cut in decades, saving the average worker over £900/year.

Over state pension age?

You no longer pay employee NI, even if still working. Use the "No NI" checkbox in the calculator to model this.

Pensions

Workplace Pensions & Tax Relief

February 2025 · 6 min read

Auto-enrolment

Minimum contribution is 5% of qualifying earnings (£6,240 to £50,270). Your employer adds at least 3%.

Salary sacrifice

You agree to a lower salary in exchange for higher employer pension contributions. You save both income tax and NI on the sacrificed amount. For a 40% taxpayer, that's up to 42% saved on every pound contributed.

Personal pensions (SIPPs)

You get tax relief at your marginal rate. Basic rate relief (20%) is added automatically by your provider. Higher and additional rate taxpayers claim extra through their tax return.

Mortgages

How Much Does 1% Interest Really Cost?

February 2025 · 5 min read

On a £200,000 mortgage over 25 years:

  • At 4.0%: £1,056/month — £116,702 total interest
  • At 4.5%: £1,112/month — £133,536 total interest
  • At 5.0%: £1,170/month — £150,932 total interest

That's over £34,000 difference between 4% and 5%. Use our mortgage calculator to compare rates.

Career

What a Pay Rise Actually Means After Tax

February 2025 · 5 min read

If you earn £50,000 and get a £5,000 raise, that extra falls entirely in the 40% band. Combined with 2% NI, you keep only £2,900. That's a 42% marginal rate.

The £100k cliff

Between £100,000 and £125,140, the effective marginal rate is 60%. A raise from £100k to £105k gives only £2,000 extra take-home.

Alternatives to a higher salary

  • Pension contributions: Salary sacrifice to stay below £100k
  • Company car or EV scheme: Tax-efficient benefit in kind
  • Flexible working: Reduced hours at same hourly rate

Use our salary comparison tool to see the real difference.

About This Calculator

Wondering what your payslip actually means? This free UK salary calculator breaks down exactly how much income tax, National Insurance, student loan, and pension comes out of your pay — so you know what's really hitting your bank account each month.

What is this?

This is a free UK salary calculator that helps you understand exactly how much of your pay you take home after tax, National Insurance, student loan repayments, and pension contributions. It covers the 2024/25, 2025/26 and 2026/27 tax years and supports both England/Wales and Scottish tax rates.

All calculations run entirely in your browser — no data is sent anywhere. Your salary information never leaves your device.

Tools included
  • Take-Home Pay — Full salary breakdown with tax bands, NI, pension, and student loan.
  • Hourly Wage — Convert your hourly rate into annual salary and net pay.
  • Required Salary — Find the gross salary needed for a specific take-home amount.
  • Compare Salaries — Side-by-side comparison of two different salaries.
  • Compare Tax Years — See how budget changes affect the same salary across years.
  • Mortgage — Monthly payments, total interest, and amortisation schedules.
  • Student Loan — Repayment projections for all UK plans including write-off dates.
  • Debt Consolidation — Compare current debts against a single consolidated loan.
Data sources & accuracy

Tax thresholds, rates, and National Insurance bands are sourced from HMRC published rates. Student loan thresholds come from the Student Loans Company.

While every effort is made to ensure accuracy, this tool provides estimates only and should not be considered financial advice. For formal tax calculations, consult HMRC or a qualified accountant.

Privacy

This calculator runs entirely client-side in your browser. No salary data, personal information, or usage data is collected, stored, or transmitted to any server. The only item stored locally is your theme preference (light/dark mode) using localStorage.

Contact

Found a bug or have a suggestion? Get in touch at hello@salarycal.co.uk. Tax data is updated annually when new rates are confirmed by HMRC.