Earn between £100,000 and £125,140 and your effective marginal income tax rate hits 60% — not 40%. One of the most punishing anomalies in the UK tax system, and most people who fall into it have no idea it exists.
The UK Personal Allowance (£12,570 for 2025/26) is withdrawn above £100,000 at a rate of £1 of allowance for every £2 of income. The allowance reaches zero at £125,140. This means every pound earned in the £100,000–£125,140 band is taxed at 40% Income Tax as normal — but also triggers a loss of personal allowance that is itself taxed at 40%. Combined, the effective marginal rate on each of those pounds is 60%.
This is not a statutory rate — it appears nowhere in the tax legislation as "60%". It emerges from the interaction of two rules: the 40% higher rate and the taper mechanism. That is precisely why it goes unnoticed.
The official tax rates present a misleadingly tidy picture. The reality, once the Personal Allowance taper is factored in, is a sharp and counterintuitive spike in the middle of the distribution.
Effective rates on income only. NI and dividend tax not shown. The 60% is the effective marginal rate in the taper zone, not a statutory rate.
The mechanism is easiest to understand with a concrete example. Consider two employees: one earns £100,000, the other earns £102,000. The £2,000 salary difference should result in roughly £800 more take-home pay (£2,000 after 40% tax). It does not.
The person earning £102,000 pays £1,200 more in tax than the person earning £100,000 — on just £2,000 more salary. Their net gain is only £800. This is why a £10,000 pay rise between £100,000 and £110,000 results in only £4,000 more take-home. The other £6,000 goes to HMRC.
The most widely used and effective response is to make pension contributions that bring your adjusted net income below £100,000. Pension contributions — whether via salary sacrifice, relief at source, or net pay arrangement — reduce adjusted net income, which is the figure HMRC uses to calculate how much Personal Allowance you retain.
Without pension contribution: Adjusted net income = £110,000. Personal Allowance = £12,570 − £5,000 taper = £7,570. You pay tax on £102,430.
With £10,000 pension contribution: Adjusted net income = £100,000. Personal Allowance = £12,570 (fully restored). You pay tax on £87,430.
Tax saving: The £10,000 pension contribution saves £6,000 in Income Tax (£10,000 at 40% plus £5,000 restored allowance at 40%). The contribution costs you only £4,000 net. £10,000 enters your pension; you are only £4,000 worse off in take-home. That is a 60% guaranteed upfront return — before any investment growth.
If you or your partner receives Child Benefit and either of you earns above £60,000, a separate charge applies — the High Income Child Benefit Charge. Above £80,000, the entire Child Benefit is effectively clawed back. This creates an additional effective marginal rate for those in the £60,000–£80,000 band. Pension contributions that reduce income below these thresholds can also restore Child Benefit entitlement. This is another reason that individuals approaching these income levels should review their pension contribution strategy carefully with a qualified adviser.
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