Tax year 2026 / 27

£80,000 salary,
after tax.

On a £80,000 gross salary in the UK for the 2026/27 tax year, your take-home pay is £56,957.40 a year — or £4,746.45 per month. Here's exactly how that's calculated, and how to keep more of it.

Annual take-home
£56,957.40
71.2% of your gross salary
Monthly
£4,746.45
12 paydays
Weekly
£1,095.33
52 weeks
Daily
£219.07
5-day week
Hourly
£29.21
37.5 hrs/wk

Where your money goes on £80,000

Your £80,000 gross salary is reduced by income tax and National Insurance before it lands in your bank account. For the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027), here's the precise breakdown:

Gross salaryBefore any deductions
£80,000.00
100.0%
Income tax2026/27 rates
−£19,432.00
24.3%
National InsuranceClass 1 employee
−£3,610.60
4.5%
Take-home pay
£56,957.40
71.2%

Why these specific numbers?

The first £12,570 of your salary is your Personal Allowance — completely tax-free. Income between £12,571 and £50,270 is taxed at the 20% basic rate. The £29,730 you earn above £50,270 is taxed at the 40% higher rate. That higher-rate portion is what pulls your effective tax rate up compared with lower salaries.

National Insurance is 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270 (that band is worth £3,016.00), then drops to just 2% on everything above £50,270. On £80,000 that adds £594.60 of upper-rate NI, for a total of £3,610.60.

How £80,000 compares

See how £80,000 stacks up against nearby salaries — and how much extra take-home pay you actually keep for each step up the ladder:

Gross salary Income tax NI Take-home (year) Take-home (month) Effective rate
£65,000£13,432£3,311£48,257.40£4,021.4574.2%
£70,000£15,432£3,411£51,157.40£4,263.1273.1%
£75,000£17,432£3,511£54,057.40£4,504.7872.1%
£80,000£19,432£3,611£56,957.40£4,746.4571.2%
£85,000£21,432£3,711£59,857.40£4,988.1270.4%
£90,000£23,432£3,811£62,757.40£5,229.7869.7%
£95,000£25,432£3,911£65,657.40£5,471.4569.1%

The effective rate — the share of your gross salary you actually keep — falls as you earn more, because higher portions of income are taxed at higher rates. This is why a pay rise never feels as big in your bank account as it does on paper.

£80,000 in Scotland — what's different?

Scotland uses a different income tax system with six bands (compared to three in the rest of the UK). On the same £80,000 gross salary, a Scottish taxpayer's bill looks like this:

Income tax (Scotland)Six-band system
£21,732.05
27.2%
National InsuranceSame UK-wide rate
£3,610.60
4.5%
Take-home (Scotland)
£54,657.35
68.3%

That's £2,300.05 less per year than a worker on the same £80,000 in England, Wales, or Northern Ireland. Scotland's bands and rates differ from rUK at almost every level, so the gap depends heavily on your exact salary.

Try the calculator in Scotland mode →

The pension salary sacrifice trick

Pension salary sacrifice reduces your tax and NI bill while still putting money toward retirement. On £80,000, here's how different contribution levels play out:

Pension contribution Sacrifice (annual) Tax saved NI saved Take-home (year) Net cost
0% (no pension)£0£0£0£56,957.40£0
5% sacrifice£4,000£1,600£80£54,637.40£2,320
10% sacrifice£8,000£3,200£160£52,317.40£4,640
15% sacrifice£12,000£4,800£240£49,997.40£6,960

Read the 5% row carefully: putting £4,000 into your pension via salary sacrifice only reduces your take-home pay by £2,320. The difference comes from tax and NI you no longer pay. You're effectively getting a 42% boost on every pound contributed — before any employer matching or investment growth.

The catch: the money is locked away until age 55 (rising to 57 from 2028), and it counts toward your annual £60,000 pension allowance.

See the full salary-sacrifice breakdown →

Who earns £80,000 in the UK?

£80,000 places you in roughly the top 6-8% of UK earners. A significant majority of the gap above your Personal Allowance is taxed at 40%.

Common roles paying around £80,000 include:

  • Public sector: most senior NHS and civil service roles, large multi-academy trust CEOs
  • Professional services: partners and directors in law, accounting, and consulting
  • Tech: directors of engineering, senior staff engineers, heads of product
  • Finance: finance directors, senior corporate finance roles
  • Management: senior directors, divisional managing directors

At £80,000, roughly £29,730 of your income is taxed at 40%. You are £20,000 below the £100,000 threshold where the Personal Allowance taper begins — a steep effective tax zone worth understanding before your next pay rise.

Want to see your exact figures?

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Frequently asked questions

How much do I take home on £80,000 in the UK?

On a £80,000 gross salary in the UK for the 2026/27 tax year, your take-home pay is £56,957.40 a year, which works out to £4,746.45 a month or £1,095.33 a week. This is after deducting £19,432.00 in income tax and £3,610.60 in National Insurance.

How much tax do I pay on £80,000?

On a £80,000 salary, you pay £19,432.00 in income tax for 2026/27. The first £12,570 is tax-free (Personal Allowance). Income up to £50,270 is taxed at 20%, and the portion above at the 40% higher rate.

How much National Insurance do I pay on £80,000?

On a £80,000 salary, you pay £3,610.60 in Class 1 National Insurance for 2026/27. National Insurance is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, then 2% on earnings above £50,270.

Is £80,000 a good salary in the UK?

£80,000 places you in roughly the top 6-8% of UK earners. A significant majority of the gap above your Personal Allowance is taxed at 40%.

How can I increase my take-home pay on £80,000?

The most effective way is pension salary sacrifice. Contributing 5% (£4,000) reduces your take-home by only £2,320 because you save the rest in tax and NI. The full contribution still goes into your pension. Marriage Allowance, cycle-to-work, and EV salary sacrifice schemes can help too.

What if my tax code isn't 1257L?

The figures above assume the standard 1257L tax code. Other codes change your Personal Allowance: BR taxes everything at 20%, D0 at 40%, K codes add to your taxable income, and S/C prefixes apply Scottish/Welsh rates. Check your latest payslip — if your code differs, use the main calculator with your actual code for precise figures.

Are these figures different if I'm self-employed earning £80,000 profit?

Yes. Self-employed people pay Class 4 NI at 6% (not 8%) on profits between £12,570 and £50,270, plus £3.45/week Class 2 NI. On £80,000 of profit, take-home would be approximately £57,532 — about £575 more than an employee on the same gross. Self-employed don't get employer pension contributions, paid holiday, or sick pay.