Salary & Take-Home Pay calculator

Salary Calculator

Last updated: 10 July 2026Information correct for tax year: 2026/27

This salary calculator gives a planning estimate for the 2026/27 tax year. It models standard employment income and does not include every tax-code adjustment, benefit, salary-sacrifice arrangement or payroll rule.

Quick answer

Enter annual salary and the applicable options to estimate Income Tax, employee National Insurance, pension, student-loan deductions and take-home pay.

Calculator

Enter your numbers

Enter contractual gross salary before tax and deductions.
Select where you are resident for Income Tax.
Simple gross-pay percentage used for this estimate.
Choose a plan if payroll deductions apply.
Select yes if a postgraduate loan also applies.
Optional annual amount for deductions not otherwise modelled.

How to use this calculator

  1. Enter the figures that match your current scenario.
  2. Check the effective date, assumptions and any jurisdiction or plan selection.
  3. Review the breakdown, test a second scenario and verify the result before acting.

Explanation

What it is

Enter annual salary and the applicable options to estimate Income Tax, employee National Insurance, pension, student-loan deductions and take-home pay.

How it works

The method applies the 2026/27 standard Personal Allowance and regional Income Tax bands, employee Class 1 National Insurance thresholds and selected student-loan thresholds. It is a simplified annual model rather than a payslip engine.

When to use it

Use this tool to explore a planning scenario before checking current official rules, product documents or professional guidance.

Limitations

  • The result is an estimate based only on the inputs shown.
  • Rates, thresholds and product terms can change after the effective date.
  • The calculator does not replace an official assessment, provider quote or personalised advice.

Key terms

Estimate
A planning result produced from the stated inputs and assumptions, not a guaranteed outcome.
Effective date
The date or tax year for which a changing rule, threshold or rate has been checked.
Authoritative source
An official or regulator-backed source used to support a rule, rate or calculation method.

Formula

How we calculate this

The method applies the 2026/27 standard Personal Allowance and regional Income Tax bands, employee Class 1 National Insurance thresholds and selected student-loan thresholds. It is a simplified annual model rather than a payslip engine.

Net pay = gross pay − Income Tax − National Insurance − selected deductions

Statutory or methodological reference:GOV.UK official guidance — National Minimum Wage Rates.

Formula trace: Versioned 2026/27 UK payroll engine: progressive income-tax bands by jurisdiction, Personal Allowance taper, NI category thresholds, pension/salary-sacrifice, student-loan plan and benefit-in-kind options; publish formula trace and known-answer tests.

Worked example

Enter realistic figures into the salary calculator and compare the result with the breakdown. Change one assumption at a time so you can see which factor has the greatest effect. Check the governing rule at GOV.UK official guidance — National Minimum Wage Rates.

FAQ

What does the salary calculator calculate?

Enter annual salary and the applicable options to estimate Income Tax, employee National Insurance, pension, student-loan deductions and take-home pay.

Which assumptions have the biggest effect?

The most important assumptions are the amounts, time period, applicable rate or threshold, and any jurisdiction or plan choice shown in the form.

How accurate is this estimate?

It is designed for planning and testing scenarios. Accuracy depends on the inputs and whether your circumstances fit the simplified method described on the page.

Can I use the result as a final decision?

No. Verify changing rules and product terms, and seek suitable professional or official guidance when the decision is material or complex.

When should I recalculate?

Recalculate after a change in income, balance, rate, term, household circumstances, tax year or official policy.

Common mistakes

  • Using a headline rate without checking whether it applies to the full amount.
  • Mixing monthly and annual figures.
  • Treating an educational estimate as an official assessment or guaranteed quote.

Tips

  • Test a cautious scenario as well as an optimistic one.
  • Keep a note of the assumptions and effective date.
  • Compare the result with official guidance or provider documents before acting.

Related calculators

Related guides

Sources and editorial review

Author and review

Author: FinanceHub UK Editorial Team — Editorial. Editorial policy.

Reviewed by role: Employment-law/pay specialist where legal claims apply. Named qualified reviewer sign-off is pending before production.

Review record date: 2026-07-10. Next review due: 2027-03-01.