A gross salary of £100,000 in 2026/27 in England, Wales or Northern Ireland leaves a take-home of £68,557 a year — about £5,713 a month or £1,318 a week. Income tax of £27,432 and employee National Insurance of £4,011 are taken before pay reaches the bank.
The full breakdown for England, Wales and Northern Ireland
The numbers below assume a single source of employment, the standard 1257L tax code, no salary sacrifice, no benefits in kind, and no student loan. Add any of those and the take-home figure shifts — see the calculator at the bottom for a personal breakdown.
| Component | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £100,000 | £8,333 |
| Personal allowance applied | £12,570 | £1,048 |
| Income tax | −£27,432 | −£2,286 |
| Employee National Insurance | −£4,011 | −£334 |
| Take-home | £68,557 | £5,713 |
Effective tax-and-NI rate: 31.4%. Of every gross pound you earn, you keep about 69p.
The Scottish version is different
Scotland has its own income tax bands set by the Scottish Parliament. National Insurance is reserved (UK-wide), so only the income-tax slice differs. On the same £100,000 gross salary in Scotland, the calculation is:
Same £100,000 salary, Scottish tax bands
| Scottish income tax | £30,778 |
| National Insurance (UK-wide) | £4,011 |
| Take-home | £65,211 a year (£5,434/month) |
Difference vs rUK: £-3,346 a year less take-home in Scotland.
Why £100,000 is the start of the worst tax band in the UK system
The personal allowance tapers between £100,000 and £125,140. For every £2 you earn above £100,000, your personal allowance reduces by £1. At £125,140 the personal allowance is gone entirely.
The arithmetic is brutal. A £1 pay rise above £100,000 gets you:
- Lose £0.40 to higher-rate income tax (40% on the new £1)
- Lose another £0.20 to lost personal allowance — because £0.50 of personal allowance goes, and that £0.50 was previously sheltered from 40% tax, so you now pay 40% × £0.50 = £0.20 extra
- Plus £0.02 NI on the new £1
- Total marginal deduction: 62%. You keep £0.38 of every gross pound earned in this band.
For five-figure pay rises, lump sums or bonuses, this band is genuinely brutal. A £25,000 bonus paid into the £100,000–£125,000 zone takes home about £9,500 — the rest goes to HMRC.
The defensive playbook is well-established and works:
- Sacrifice into a pension until your taxable salary lands at exactly £100,000. The slice you sacrifice gets effectively 62% relief, the highest legal pension relief in the UK system.
- Use Gift Aid on charitable donations — this extends your basic-rate band, with the same effect as a pension contribution.
- If you have a partner with unused allowances or basic-rate band capacity, splitting investment income via a joint account or transfer of dividend-bearing shares can shift income out of your 60% band.
The 60% tax trap guide walks through the full mechanics. The adjusted net income calculator shows how much you would need to sacrifice to escape the band cleanly.
What this calculation does not include
- Pension contributions. Most employees auto-enrol at 5% gross, with employer 3%. That moves the income tax and NI numbers — and reduces taxable pay. Use the salary sacrifice calculator for the full picture.
- Student loan repayments. Plan 1, Plan 2, Plan 4, Plan 5 and the Postgraduate Loan all use different thresholds and rates. The student loan calculator compares them.
- Bonuses, overtime and one-off payments. These can push you across thresholds and trigger temporary higher PAYE deductions that reverse out at year-end. The bonus and pay-rise calculator shows the actual marginal hit.
- Benefits in kind. A company car, private medical insurance, or interest-free loan all sit outside salary but are taxable via your tax code. The company car BIK calculator handles the most common case.
- Multiple jobs. If you have a second job, the second employer typically uses a BR (basic rate) code on all pay — meaning no personal allowance is applied to that income. The second-job tax code calculator works through it.
Want this for your exact circumstances?
The full UK tax calculator handles pension contributions, student loans, bonuses, benefits in kind, Scotland, and multiple jobs.
Open the calculator with £100,000 pre-filled →Sources and methodology
The bands and rates above are HMRC's published 2026/27 figures: income tax rates and Personal Allowance, National Insurance rates and categories, and Scottish Income Tax. UK Tax Drag is not authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority and does not provide regulated financial advice — see the content disclaimer for the full position. The methodology page documents how every calculator is built and reviewed.
Other take-home pay scenarios
- £30,000 take-home in 2026/27 — graduate / first-job
- £50,000 take-home in 2026/27 — at the edge of higher rate
- £75,000 take-home in 2026/27 — clearly higher rate
- £100,000 take-home in 2026/27 — entering the 60% trap
- £150,000 take-home in 2026/27 — additional rate
- All salary calculators and guides