Disposable income after housing - £50,000 salary
| City | Take-home pay | Annual rent (1-bed) | Council tax (Band C avg) | Transport | Disposable after housing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newcastle | £38,920 | £10,200 | £1,700 | £900 | £26,120 |
| Glasgow | £38,450 | £11,400 | £1,599 | £840 | £24,611 |
| Birmingham | £38,920 | £12,600 | £1,950 | £900 | £23,470 |
| Cardiff | £38,920 | £11,700 | £1,750 | £840 | £24,630 |
| Leeds | £38,920 | £12,600 | £1,900 | £900 | £23,520 |
| Manchester | £38,920 | £13,800 | £1,830 | £1,000 | £22,290 |
| Edinburgh | £38,450 | £15,600 | £1,675 | £900 | £20,275 |
| Bristol | £38,920 | £15,300 | £2,283 | £1,080 | £20,257 |
| London Zone 2-3 | £38,920 | £21,600 | £1,650 | £1,920 | £13,750 |
Net take-home after income tax, NI. Then annual rent for 1-bed at median city level, average Band C council tax, annual transport pass. Excludes ongoing utilities/food/leisure.
Disposable income at £75,000 salary
| City | Take-home | Annual rent (2-bed) | Council tax (Band D avg) | Transport | Disposable after housing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Newcastle | £54,420 | £14,400 | £1,830 | £900 | £37,290 |
| Glasgow | £52,755 | £14,400 | £1,599 | £840 | £35,916 |
| Birmingham | £54,420 | £15,000 | £1,950 | £900 | £36,570 |
| Cardiff | £54,420 | £14,400 | £1,750 | £840 | £37,430 |
| Leeds | £54,420 | £15,600 | £1,900 | £900 | £36,020 |
| Manchester | £54,420 | £18,000 | £1,830 | £1,000 | £33,590 |
| Edinburgh | £52,755 | £19,800 | £1,675 | £900 | £30,380 |
| Bristol | £54,420 | £19,200 | £2,283 | £1,080 | £31,857 |
| London Zone 2-3 | £54,420 | £25,800 | £1,650 | £1,920 | £25,050 |
The disposable-income league table
Annual disposable income after housing - £50,000 salary
Newcastle ranks highest, London Zone 2-3 lowest by a wide margin. Manchester’s rapid 40% rent increase since 2020 has pushed it down the league table - Cardiff and Glasgow now offer more disposable income at this salary.
The key findings
- London Zone 2-3 is the most expensive by a margin - £8,500-£12,500/year less disposable income than the leading cities at the same salary.
- Newcastle and Glasgow are the highest-value cost-of-living cities, despite Glasgow paying Scottish income tax (which at £50k costs only £470/year vs England).
- The Scottish tax effect at £50,000 is modest (£470/year) but widens above £75k.
- Bristol’s high council tax (top 10% of England Band D) reduces disposable income by ~£500/year vs Newcastle equivalent.
- Manchester’s rent rise since 2020 has eliminated much of its historical advantage over Cardiff and Leeds.
How to cite this data
See detailed city money guides
Each of the 9 cities has a dedicated money guide covering rent by area, tax position, lifestyle thresholds and common money mistakes.
Browse city money guidesMethodology + sources
- Take-home figures use the same methodology as our Take-Home Salary Map
- Rent data from ONS Private Rental Statistics and Rightmove city pages 2026
- Council tax from each city council’s 2026/27 Band D publications
- Transport: annual season ticket (or equivalent for unlimited city travel) per city: TfL Z2-3 travelcard for London, Metrolink/Bee Network for Manchester, Lothian Buses ridacard for Edinburgh, etc.
- 1-bed rent used at £50k salary (more typical for that income level); 2-bed rent used at £75k
- Excludes ongoing utilities, food, social spending, savings
- Figures are medians for each city - actual rents vary by neighbourhood
Other UK Tax Drag hero data assets
How UK Tax Drag holds itself to account
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