Enter your gross annual salary to see where you rank in the UK income distribution, which tax thresholds you're near, and how much frozen thresholds have cost you since 2022.
| Gross salary | UK percentile (approx.) | Key threshold significance |
|---|---|---|
| £12,570 | ~15th | Personal Allowance — pays no Income Tax below this |
| £25,000 | ~35th | Student Loan Plan 5 threshold begins |
| £27,295 | ~42nd | Student Loan Plan 2 threshold begins |
| £37,430 | 50th | UK median full-time salary (ONS 2024) |
| £50,270 | ~78th | Higher rate Income Tax begins (40%) |
| £60,000 | ~85th | HICBC fully applies if claiming Child Benefit |
| £80,000 | ~92nd | Child Benefit fully clawed back above this |
| £100,000 | ~96th | 60% tax trap begins — Personal Allowance tapered |
| £125,140 | ~98th | Personal Allowance fully removed — 45% rate |
In the March 2021 Budget, the Chancellor froze all Income Tax thresholds at their 2021/22 levels until April 2028. Over this period, wage inflation has pushed millions of workers into higher tax bands — not because rates changed, but because their nominal salary rose while the thresholds stayed fixed. This is fiscal drag — a stealth tax rise that never required a vote.
The OBR estimates that 3.7 million additional taxpayers will be pulled into paying Income Tax or a higher rate band by 2028 due to the freeze — compared with what would have happened if thresholds rose with inflation. A worker on £40,000 today has paid approximately £900–£1,200 more in tax between 2022 and 2026 than they would have if thresholds had been indexed to CPI. The calculator above estimates your personal fiscal drag cost.
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