Answers · UK 2025/26
How much tax do I pay on £1,100 a week in the UK?
On a £1,100-a-week wage (£57,200 a year) for 2026/27, you pay £10,312.00 Income Tax and £3,154.60 National Insurance over the year, leaving £43,733.40 take-home pay -- about £841.03 a week or £3,644.45 a month.
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A wage of £1,100 a week works out to £57,200 over a 52-week year. After the £12,570 Personal Allowance, taxable income is £44,630, split between the 20% basic rate band and the 40% higher rate band above £50,270, giving £10,312.00 Income Tax for the year. National Insurance is 8% on earnings between the £12,570 Primary Threshold and the £50,270 Upper Earnings Limit, plus 2% above that, coming to £3,154.60. Total annual deductions of £13,466.60 leave £43,733.40 take-home pay a year -- about £841.03 a week or £3,644.45 a month. In practice, PAYE calculates tax and National Insurance on each individual payday using that pay period's threshold (for a weekly-paid employee, roughly a 52nd of the annual figures), so your actual weekly deduction should closely track £198.31 tax and £60.67 National Insurance most weeks, smoothing out slightly if your hours or overtime vary. Use the Take-Home Pay calculator and select weekly pay frequency to check your exact payslip figures.
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This answer is informational only and does not constitute financial, tax or legal advice. Figures are for the 2025/26 UK tax year. See our methodology and sources.