77 articles tagged with National Insurance.
£105,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £70,457.40 net (£5,871.45/month). Personal Allowance taper applies. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£115,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £74,257.40 net (£6,188.12/month). Personal Allowance taper applies. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£51,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £40,137.40 net (£3,344.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£52,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £40,717.40 net (£3,393.12/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £1,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£53,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £41,297.40 net (£3,441.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £2,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£54,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £41,877.40 net (£3,489.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £3,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£56,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £43,037.40 net (£3,586.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £5,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£57,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £43,617.40 net (£3,634.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £6,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£59,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £44,777.40 net (£3,731.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £8,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£62,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £46,517.40 net (£3,876.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £11,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£64,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £47,677.40 net (£3,973.12/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £13,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£66,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £48,837.40 net (£4,069.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £15,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£68,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £49,997.40 net (£4,166.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £17,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£72,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £52,317.40 net (£4,359.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £21,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£74,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £53,477.40 net (£4,456.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £23,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£76,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £54,637.40 net (£4,553.12/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £25,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£78,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £55,797.40 net (£4,649.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £27,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£82,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £58,117.40 net (£4,843.12/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £31,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£84,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £59,277.40 net (£4,939.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £33,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£86,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £60,437.40 net (£5,036.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £35,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£88,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £61,597.40 net (£5,133.12/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £37,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£92,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £63,917.40 net (£5,326.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £41,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£94,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £65,077.40 net (£5,423.12/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £43,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£96,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £66,237.40 net (£5,519.78/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £45,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£98,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £67,397.40 net (£5,616.45/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £47,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
The reduced-rate 'married woman's stamp' National Insurance election, abolished for new claims in 1977, still reduces State Pension entitlement for some women reaching pension age in 2026/27.
Working several jobs at once can mean you pay more National Insurance than the annual maximum requires. How the deferment and refund process actually works in 2026/27.
Your payslip's NI category letter (A, B, C, H, M, X and others) determines how much National Insurance you and your employer actually pay. What each letter means in 2026/27.
Complete guide to UK Civil Service pay grades 2026/27, from Administrative Assistant through SCS Senior Civil Servant. Includes pension, London weighting, and take-home calculations.
Explore NHS junior doctor pay bands for 2026/27, including Foundation Year, core training, and specialty training grades. Calculate your take-home salary with banding supplements and pension deductions.
If your self-employed profits are low, voluntary Class 2 National Insurance can buy a full qualifying year for a fraction of the cost of Class 3. Here is how the maths stacks up in 2026/27.
The GBP 10,500 Employment Allowance cuts employer NI, but a company whose only employee is its sole director usually cannot claim it. Here is the rule and the planning around it.
£42,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is about £33,650 net (£2,804/month). Full income tax and National Insurance breakdown, monthly and weekly figures, the effect of pension and student loan, and a Scotland comparison.
How much does salary sacrifice into a pension really save you in 2026/27? We break down the income tax and National Insurance savings by tax band, with worked examples and the traps to avoid.
The 2026 UK minimum wage rates: National Living Wage £12.71, 18–20 rate £10.85, apprentice £8, who gets which rate, and what each works out to per year after tax.
National Insurance explained for 2026/27: employee Class 1 at 8% and 2%, employer NI at 15% above £5,000, Class 2 and Class 4 for the self-employed, the 35 qualifying years for the State Pension and how to check your record.
How National Insurance works for the self-employed in 2026/27: Class 4 at 6%/2%, voluntary Class 2, the qualifying years that build your State Pension, and how to protect your record.
A pay rise from £50,000 to £60,000 in 2026/27 adds £10,000 gross but only about £5,800 net. Full breakdown of the 40% higher-rate cliff, with monthly figures and Scotland.
EV salary sacrifice in 2026/27 cuts the cost of a lease by 30-50% through income tax and NI relief, with BIK at just 4%. Full worked examples on £40k and £60k salaries.
Filing your first Self Assessment as a sole trader in 2026: registering for a UTR, deadlines, allowable expenses, Class 4 NI, payments on account and the new MTD ITSA rules.
£20,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £17,920 net (£1,493/month). Full income tax, NI and take-home breakdown with student loan, pension and Scotland comparisons.
£25,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £21,520 net (£1,793/month). Full income tax, NI and take-home breakdown with student loan and pension for 2026/27.
£30,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £25,120 net (£2,093/month). Full income tax and NI breakdown, student loan, pension, and Scotland comparison.
£35,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £28,720 net (£2,393/month). Full income tax and NI breakdown, student loan, pension, and Scotland comparison for 2026/27.
£40,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £32,320 net (£2,693/month). Full income tax and NI breakdown, student loan, pension, and Scotland comparison for 2026/27.
£45,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £35,920 net (£2,993/month). Full income tax and NI breakdown for 2026/27, with student loan, pension, and Scotland comparison.
£55,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £42,457 net (£3,538/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £4,730. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£60,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £45,357 net (£3,780/month). Higher-rate tax applies on £9,730. Full breakdown with pension, student loan and Scotland for 2026/27.
£65,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £48,257 net (£4,021/month). Higher-rate tax applies. Full income tax, NI and Scotland breakdown for 2026/27.
£75,000 a year after tax in 2026/27 is £54,057 net (£4,505/month). Full higher-rate tax, NI and Scotland breakdown. Pension strategy to reduce 40% tax exposure.
£100,000 after tax in 2026/27 is £68,557 net (£5,713/month). But earning £1 more triggers a brutal 60% effective marginal rate. Full breakdown and pension strategy to avoid it.
£120,000 gross in 2026/27 gives £78,157.40 net — £6,513 a month. You're deep inside the Personal Allowance taper zone where the effective marginal rate hits 62%. Full breakdown, Scotland comparison and pension strategy.
£125,140 gross in 2026/27 gives £80,624.60 net — £6,719/month. This is the exact point where your Personal Allowance hits zero. Above this, the marginal rate drops to 47%. Full breakdown, Scotland figures and pension escape route.
£150,000 gross in 2026/27 gives £93,800.40 net — £7,816.70/month. No Personal Allowance, three income tax bands apply, and you keep 62.5%. Full breakdown, Scotland figures, pension planning and the Additional Rate explained.
£200,000 gross in 2026/27 gives £120,300.40 net — £10,025.03/month. No Personal Allowance, 45% Additional Rate applies on most income, and you keep 60.2%. Full breakdown, pension Annual Allowance tapering rules, Scotland figures and tax planning.
£50,000 after income tax and NI in 2026/27 leaves you £39,519.60 a year — £3,293.30 a month. Full breakdown including basic-rate tax, NI, student loan and Scotland comparison.
£70,000 after income tax and NI in 2026/27 leaves you £51,157.40 a year — £4,263.12 a month. Full breakdown including higher-rate tax, NI, pension strategy and Scotland comparison.
£80,000 after income tax and NI in 2026/27 leaves you £56,957 a year — £4,746 a month. Full breakdown including higher-rate tax, NI and Scotland comparison.
£85,000 after income tax and NI in 2026/27 leaves you £59,857 a year — £4,988 a month. Full breakdown including higher-rate tax, NI, Scotland comparison and pension strategy.
£90,000 after income tax and NI in 2026/27 leaves you £62,757 a year — £5,230 a month. Full breakdown including higher-rate tax, NI, Scotland comparison and pension strategy.
£95,000 after income tax and NI in 2026/27 leaves you £65,657 a year — £5,471 a month. Full breakdown including the £100k Personal Allowance trap, NI, Scotland comparison and pension strategy.
The UK personal allowance for 2025/26 is £12,570 — so you can earn up to £12,570 tax-free. But National Insurance starts earlier, at £12,570/year too. Full breakdown with salary examples.
On £500/day, working outside IR35 via a limited company takes home approximately £70,000/year net. Inside IR35 via umbrella is approximately £57,000 — around a £13,000 annual difference. Full case study with numbers.
The 2026/27 UK tax year starts 6 April 2026. Key changes include the MTD ITSA mandate for self-employed, Capital Gains Tax rate increases, higher employer NI and frozen thresholds continuing. Full breakdown.
£125,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is about £77,032 net (£6,419/month). Full UK breakdown: personal allowance fully tapered, the 60% trap, when the additional rate begins and why £125,140 is the most expensive £1 in UK pay.
£200,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is about £117,335 net (£9,778/month). Full UK breakdown: 45% additional rate, lost personal allowance, NI, pension tapering risk and the real tax cost on a £200k salary.
£25,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is £21,540 net (£1,795/month). Roughly what a 40-hour National Living Wage worker earns. Full breakdown of income tax, NI, Universal Credit interaction and the marginal rate that really matters at this salary.
£35,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is £28,966 net (£2,414/month). Full breakdown of income tax, NI, pension and student loan deductions on a £35k salary — close to the UK median full-time wage.
£45,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is £35,966 net (£2,997/month). Full UK breakdown of income tax, NI, student loan and pension on a £45k salary — squarely inside the basic rate band but close to the higher-rate threshold.
£55,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is £42,936 net (£3,578/month). Full UK breakdown of income tax, NI and pension on a £55k salary — your first £4,730 inside the 40% higher-rate band.
£60,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is £45,320 net (£3,777/month). Full breakdown of income tax, NI, pension and student loan deductions — and why every extra £1,000 above £50,270 only lands £580 in your bank account.
£70,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is about £51,540 net (£4,295/month). Full UK breakdown: full personal allowance, basic and higher-rate income tax, employee NI, and how a £3,000 pension contribution reclaims a 42% marginal rate.
£75,000 a year after tax in 2025/26 is £53,820 net (£4,485/month). Of your salary £24,730 sits in the 40% higher-rate band — every extra £1,000 above £50,270 only nets £580. Full breakdown for 2025/26.
Self-employed Class 4 National Insurance fell to 6% on profits between £12,570 and £50,270 from April 2024 and stays there for 2025/26. Here's how it works, who pays, and worked examples on real profit figures.
You can't claim both. Tax-Free Childcare tops up your childcare account by 25% (up to £2,000 per child per year); the Universal Credit childcare element repays 85% of costs up to £1,031 per month for one child. Which suits which family in 2025/26?
Voluntary National Insurance Class 2 costs £190 per year and Class 3 costs £957 per year — but they buy the same extra State Pension entitlement. Worked examples on the payback period and who qualifies for the cheaper Class 2 route in 2026/27.
Part 2 of our Spring Budget 2026 series — what the Chancellor announced for Class 1 employee NI, the 15% employer rate, Class 4 self-employed and the abolished Class 2. Worked examples included.