Take-Home Pay · 2026/27
Take-Home Pay on £50,000 (2026/27) — UK After-Tax Salary
On a gross salary of £50,000 in the 2026/27 tax year, UK take-home (rUK) was £39,519.60 per year — about £3,293.30 a month or £759.99 per week. That's after £7,486.00 Income Tax and £2,994.40 Class 1 employee NI.
Yearly net
£39,519.60
Monthly
£3,293.30
Weekly
£759.99
Effective deductions
21.0%
Breakdown for £50,000 in 2026/27
| Gross salary | £50,000.00 |
| Personal Allowance (£12,570) | £12,570.00 |
| Income Tax | −£7,486.00 |
| Class 1 employee NI (8% / 2%) | −£2,994.40 |
| Total deductions | −£10,480.40 |
| Take-home pay | £39,519.60 |
What was different about 2026/27
2026/27 is another year of stable employee-side deductions: Income Tax thresholds frozen at PA £12,570 and higher rate £50,270 (until April 2028), employee NI unchanged at 8%/2%. The National Living Wage rose to £12.71/hr (from £12.21), and the State Pension increased by 4.8% (triple lock) to £241.30/wk.
Same £50,000 across tax years
Other salaries in 2026/27
FAQs
How much was £50,000 after tax in 2026/27?
On a gross salary of £50,000 in 2026/27, UK take-home pay (rUK — England, Wales, Northern Ireland) was £39,519.60 per year — about £3,293.30 per month or £759.99 per week. That is after £7,486.00 Income Tax and £2,994.40 Class 1 employee NI.
What was the Personal Allowance and NI threshold in 2026/27?
In 2026/27 the Personal Allowance was £12,570 and the NI primary threshold was £12,570. On £50,000, this leaves £37,430.00 taxable for Income Tax.
What if I had a Plan 2 student loan on £50,000 in 2026/27?
On £50,000 with a Plan 2 student loan in 2026/27, you would repay £1,855.35 per year (9% of earnings above the £29,385 Plan 2 threshold). That leaves a take-home of £37,664.25.
Does this include pension or salary sacrifice?
No — the figures on this page are gross-to-net using only Income Tax and Class 1 employee NI for 2026/27. Workplace pension contributions, salary sacrifice and employer-paid benefits would change your take-home. Use the live take-home calculator for current-year tweaks.
Related
Disclaimer: Figures are rUK (England, Wales, NI) Income Tax + Class 1 employee NI using published 2026/27 HMRC rates. Scottish taxpayers pay a different Income Tax schedule. Pension contributions, student loan, salary sacrifice and tax codes can change your actual take-home — always verify via HMRC personal tax account.