A first job is often the first time money feels grown-up and confusing at the same time. Gross pay, take-home pay, National Insurance, tax codes, pensions and student loan deductions can all appear on one payslip with very little explanation.
The right first-job system is simple: understand your payslip, protect your fixed costs, build a small buffer, and avoid treating the full salary as spendable. This page gives a calm route through the first few months of work.
What to check on the first payslip
- Check that your name, National Insurance number and pay period are correct.
- Compare your hours, hourly rate or salary against your contract.
- Look at taxable pay, Income Tax, National Insurance, pension, student loan and any deductions.
- If the tax code looks unusual or your take-home pay is far below expectation, check it before assuming payroll is right.
Do not opt out of the workplace pension without understanding the cost
- Auto-enrolment can feel like a pay cut because pension money leaves before you see it.
- But the employer contribution is part of the reward package. Opting out can mean giving up employer money and long-term tax advantages.
- If cash is genuinely too tight, fix the monthly budget first and make an explicit choice rather than clicking opt-out in a panic.
Build the first adult budget
- Split take-home pay into bills, food, travel, debt, savings, social spending and irregular costs.
- Keep one account for bills if possible, so rent, phone, insurance and travel money do not get mixed with weekend spending.
- Start with a starter emergency fund before lifestyle upgrades. Even GBP 250 to GBP 500 can stop a small problem becoming a credit-card problem.
The simple action order
| Moment | What to do | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Before payday | Write down fixed costs and payment dates. | You stop the first salary being swallowed by guesses. |
| On payday | Move bill money and savings before optional spending. | The most important money is protected while motivation is high. |
| After first month | Compare the plan with what actually happened. | The budget becomes realistic instead of performative. |
Common first-job traps
- Confusing salary with take-home pay.
- Ignoring student loan deductions until they appear on the payslip.
- Opting out of a pension to fix a budget that has not been written down.
- Letting subscriptions, lunches and travel upgrades become invisible fixed costs.
Where this connects on UK Tax Drag
Use this guide as the plain-English route, then open the calculator or worksheet that matches the immediate decision.