£30,000 after tax 2026/27
On a £30,000 salary in 2026/27, you will take home £25,120 per year (£2,093 per month) after income tax and National Insurance.
Your take-home pay
£23,920/year
£1,993/month · £460/week
Tax band breakdown
Effective tax rate: 20.27% · Personal allowance: £12,570
£30,000 salary: full breakdown
A £30,000 salary places you in the basic rate income tax band (20%) for 2026/27. You pay 20% income tax on earnings above £12,570 and 8% National Insurance on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270.
| Deduction | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £30,000 | £2,500 |
| Income tax | -£3,486 | -£291 |
| National Insurance | -£1,394 | -£116 |
| Take-home pay | £25,120 | £2,093 |
What £2,093 per month means
Taking home £2,093 per month (or approximately £483 per week) gives you a clear picture of your monthly budget. Your effective tax rate — the percentage of your total salary paid in income tax and NI combined — is 16.27%.
On a £30,000 salary you pay £3,486 in income tax and £1,394 in National Insurance. Together, that is £4,880 in total deductions (excluding any pension or student loan contributions), leaving you with £25,120 per year.
How to increase your take-home on £30,000
There are three main ways to keep more of a £30,000 salary:
- Pension salary sacrifice — by redirecting pension contributions through salary sacrifice, you reduce your taxable income and save on National Insurance as well as income tax. For a basic rate taxpayer, salary sacrifice saves roughly 28p per £1 contributed (20% tax + 8% NI).
- Check your tax code — if you are on the wrong tax code, you may be paying more tax than necessary. The standard code for 2026/27 is 1257L. Check your payslip and contact HMRC if it differs unexpectedly.
- Claim all eligible expenses — if you work from home or have job-related expenses your employer does not reimburse, you may be able to claim tax relief through HMRC's online service.
Adjust for your personal situation
The figures above assume the standard 1257L tax code and no student loan or pension deductions. Use the calculator at the top of this page to adjust for:
- Student loan repayments (Plans 1, 2, 4, 5 or Postgraduate)
- Pension contributions (relief at source or salary sacrifice)
- Scottish income tax rates