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Your first pay packet should not be a mystery

A plain-English first job money checklist for payslips, tax codes, minimum wage, workplace pensions, student loans and the first adult budget.

PayslipKnow each deduction
Tax codeCatch obvious errors
PensionDo not miss free money
BudgetAvoid first-pay lifestyle creep

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

Do not opt out of the workplace pension without understanding the cost

Build the first adult budget

The simple action order

MomentWhat to doWhy it matters
Before paydayWrite down fixed costs and payment dates.You stop the first salary being swallowed by guesses.
On paydayMove bill money and savings before optional spending.The most important money is protected while motivation is high.
After first monthCompare the plan with what actually happened.The budget becomes realistic instead of performative.

Common first-job traps

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.

Sources

Official sources and further guidance

Reading your first payslip line by line

Your payslip turns one number (your salary) into a smaller number (what lands in your bank). The gap is made up of named deductions, and understanding each one stops payday feeling like a mystery:

Your payslip also shows your tax code and often year-to-date totals. Keep your payslips — you will need them if you ever query a deduction or claim a tax refund.

Income Tax and the £12,570 Personal Allowance

Most people can earn a Personal Allowance of £12,570 a year before paying any Income Tax. Above that, earnings are taxed in bands — a basic rate, then a higher rate, then an additional rate — with each band only applying to the slice of income that falls within it. So a pay rise never leaves you worse off overall; only the part above each threshold is taxed at the higher rate.

PAYE spreads your Personal Allowance evenly across the year, which is why a chunk is tax-free each month rather than all at once. One thing to know early: the Personal Allowance and the band thresholds have been frozen rather than rising with inflation, so as wages grow, more people are gradually pulled into paying tax, and into higher bands — the effect this whole site is named after, fiscal drag. Scotland sets its own income tax bands and rates, so if you live in Scotland your tax may differ from the rest of the UK even on the same salary.

Check your tax code (1257L and emergency codes)

Your tax code tells your employer how much tax-free pay to give you. The standard code for someone with a single job and the full Personal Allowance is 1257L — the "1257" reflects the £12,570 allowance. It is worth understanding because employers and HMRC do sometimes get it wrong, and an incorrect code means you pay too much or too little tax.

In a first job — especially if you have no P45 from a previous employer — you may be put on an emergency tax code (shown with W1, M1 or X after the number, or a code like BR that taxes everything at the basic rate). Emergency codes often mean too much tax is deducted at first. The good news: once HMRC has your details, your code is corrected and any overpaid tax is usually refunded automatically through your pay. If your take-home looks far lower than expected, check your code rather than assuming it is right — you can see and query it in your HMRC Personal Tax Account.

Workplace pension: do not opt out of free money

Under automatic enrolment, your employer must put eligible workers into a workplace pension. The minimum total contribution is 8% of your qualifying earnings, of which the employer must pay at least 3%; you typically contribute the rest (commonly 5%, part of which is effectively topped up by tax relief). Because part of that 8% comes from your employer, opting out is one of the few ways to literally turn down money you are entitled to.

Two reasons the maths favours staying in. First, the employer match is part of your pay package — walk away from it and you have taken a pay cut nobody asked you to take. Second, contributions get tax relief, so some of what would have gone to HMRC goes into your pension instead, and decades of compounding do the heavy lifting when you start young. If money is genuinely too tight, fix the monthly budget first; opting out should be a deliberate, last-resort decision, never a panic click in week one.

Student Loan repayments, if you have one

If you went to university with a student loan, repayments restart through PAYE once you earn above your plan's threshold — you do not arrange anything; your employer deducts it automatically. The mechanism is the same across plans: you repay 9% of everything you earn above the threshold for your plan, nothing on earnings below it.

Because the thresholds are reviewed each year, check the current figure for your plan on GOV.UK. The key point: the deduction is a percentage of income above the threshold, so it scales with your salary — it is not a fixed bill, and it stops if your pay dips below the line. It behaves more like a graduate contribution than a normal debt, which is why repaying it early rarely makes sense for most graduates.

Start an emergency fund, then a LISA or ISA

Once your budget balances, put your first spare money to work in order of priority. Step one is a starter emergency fund — even £500 to £1,000 in an easy-access savings account — so a surprise cost does not become a debt. Build it towards three to six months of essential spending over time.

After that, a tax-free account is the natural next home for savings:

You do not need to choose perfectly at 22. Emergency fund first, then a tax-free wrapper, then let time do the work.

P60, P45 and the year-end paperwork

Two documents will follow you through your working life, so it is worth knowing them now:

Store both somewhere safe (a folder of scans is fine). They are the paper trail that lets you check, years later, that you paid the right tax — and reclaim it if you did not.

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