Skip to main content
High-Earner Money Guide

A UK £150k+ City professional's tax picture, 2026/27

A £150,000+ salary in the City or tech sector triggers several UK tax thresholds simultaneously: the 60% trap (PA taper), additional-rate income tax at £125,140, the tapered Annual Allowance for pensions, full HICBC if there are children, and £0 Personal Savings Allowance. The combination means marginal rates of 50-67% on incremental income are common. Here's the full 2026/27 picture and the four decisions that materially change the post-tax outcome.

6-minute read

What you need to know: A UK £150k+ City professional's tax picture, 2026/27

Quick answer: A UK additional-rate earner on £150,000 in 2026/27 takes home approximately £90,000/year (£7,500/month) on a standard tax code. Marginal rate on next £1 : 45% income tax + 2% NI = 47%. The 60% trap (£100k-£125,140) already cost ~£10,000 in extra tax on the slice between £100k and £125,140. Tapered Annual Allowance…

Key points:

A UK additional-rate earner on £150,000 in 2026/27 takes home approximately £90,000/year (£7,500/month) on a standard tax code. Marginal rate on next £1: 45% income tax + 2% NI = 47%. The 60% trap (£100k-£125,140) already cost ~£10,000 in extra tax on the slice between £100k and £125,140. Tapered Annual Allowance reduces pension contribution allowance for "adjusted income" above £260k. Most City professionals at this level should max pension, EIS/VCT and capital efficiency rather than chase incremental salary.

The headline numbers at £150k

ComponentAnnual
Gross salary£150,000
Income tax (zero PA — fully tapered)−£52,460
Employee NI (8% on basic-rate band, 2% above)−£5,012
Take-home before pension and other deductions£92,528

That's an effective tax rate of 38.3%. The Personal Allowance has been fully tapered away (taper completes at £125,140), so every £1 of income is taxed from the first penny.

At this income level the standard tax code is usually 0T (no PA) or has manual adjustments. Many City employees also receive RSUs, performance shares, options and bonuses which are taxed in addition to base salary.

The 60% trap — what it already cost between £100k and £125,140

The Personal Allowance tapers by £1 for every £2 of income above £100,000, fully removing it at £125,140. Combined with 40% income tax on the slice and 2% NI:

The 60% trap maths: On every £2 earned between £100k and £125,140:
£0.80 of income tax (40%)
£0.04 of NI (2%)
£0.40 of lost PA × 40% = £0.16 extra tax
Total tax on £2 = £1.00 — that's a 60% marginal rate on this £25,140 band.
Cumulative cost of crossing the £100k threshold to £125,140 = £10,056 of extra tax vs the £50k-£100k band.

Salary sacrifice into pension is the dominant defence at this band. £25,140 of pension contributions can completely restore the PA, saving up to £15,000 of tax.

Tapered Annual Allowance — the £260k threshold

The pension Annual Allowance (£60,000 for 2026/27) tapers above £260,000 of "adjusted income" (salary + bonuses + employer pension + benefits). For every £2 of adjusted income above £260k, the AA reduces by £1, until it hits the £10,000 floor at £360,000.

Adjusted incomeAnnual Allowance
£200,000£60,000 (full)
£260,000£60,000 (just below taper)
£300,000£40,000
£340,000£20,000
£360,000+£10,000 (floor)

Contributions above the tapered AA trigger an Annual Allowance Charge — tax-relieved going in, then taxed at marginal rate as the charge.

Carry-forward:Unused AA from the three previous tax years can be carried forward IF you were a member of a UK pension scheme in those years. This often allows one-off £100k+ contributions in bonus years for City professionals. See the tapered Annual Allowance deep dive.

RSUs, bonuses and CGT on share schemes

Tech and City employees commonly receive a mix of base salary, cash bonus, RSUs (Restricted Stock Units) and ESPP (Employee Share Purchase Plans). Tax treatment varies:

Share schemeIncome tax at vest/exercise?CGT on later sale?
RSUs (standard)Yes, full market value at vestYes, on gain above vest value
Approved Share Option (CSOP)No, if held 3+ years and within £60k capYes, on full gain
EMI options (eligible companies)No, if held 2+ yearsBADR at 10% (up to £1m lifetime)
Sharesave (SAYE)No, if held to maturityYes, on gain above option price
SIP (Share Incentive Plan)No, if held 5+ yearsNo, if held continuously in SIP

Most large US tech and bank employers use standard RSUs — income tax + employee NI on full vest value, then CGT on later sale. Many City professionals immediately sell-to-cover the tax then hold the rest, which is sensible diversification.

The four decisions worth making at £150k+

  1. Salary sacrifice to maximum pension AA every year. Below £260k adjusted income, full £60k AA available. Use the full amount unless you have specific reasons not to (LSA at £268k, retirement timing, MPAA already triggered). Pension is the single most tax-efficient saving for higher earners by a wide margin.
  2. EIS / VCT for tax efficiency beyond pension. EIS gives 30% income tax relief on up to £1m of investment (£2m if knowledge-intensive). VCT gives 30% on up to £200k. Both have tax-free dividends/gains within the wrapper. Risk is real — these are early-stage companies — but the tax efficiency for additional-rate payers is unmatched outside pension.
  3. Mortgage offset and capital efficiency. At 5-7% mortgage rates, mortgage overpayment generates a guaranteed 5-7% post-tax return — equivalent to ~12% pre-tax for an additional-rate earner. Often beats marginal investments outside pension. Worth modelling against ISA returns.
  4. Capital Gains Tax efficiency — every £3,000 AEA per spouse every year. A higher earner couple has £6,000/year of tax-free gains capacity. Crystallising £6,000/year of growth and rebuying in tax-sheltered wrappers (ISA, pension) systematically reduces lifetime CGT.

Common high-earner mistakes

Sources and methodology

Income tax rates from gov.uk Income Tax rates. Tapered Annual Allowance from gov.uk pension AA. EIS rules from gov.uk EIS introduction. RSU tax treatment from gov.uk employee share schemes.

UK Tax Drag is educational and not regulated financial advice — see the disclaimer for the full position.

Other roles in this library

Editorial accountability
Open Trust Centre →

Every page is reviewed against the editorial standards, written from primary sources, sourced openly, and corrected publicly. No affiliate revenue. No sponsored content. No paid placements.

Editorial standards Editorial process Corrections policy How we make money Editorial team Methodology