Take-Home Pay on £100,000 (UK, 2025/26)

£100,000 after tax: £68,557/yr net (£5,713/mo) in England, Wales & NI

On a £100,000 salary in 2025/26 you take home £68,557 a year (£5,713 a month) in England, Wales & Northern Ireland after £27,432 Income Tax and £4,011 National Insurance. In Scotland the net is £65,226. Real HMRC 2025/26 bands. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

What is the take-home pay on a £100,000 salary in the UK?

On £100,000 in 2025/26 you take home £68,557 a year — £5,713 a month or £1,318 a week — in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. That is after £27,432 of Income Tax and £4,011 of employee National Insurance, an effective deduction rate of 31.4%.

This page shows the real take-home pay on a £100,000 salary for the 2025/26 tax year, after Income Tax and employee National Insurance. The calculator above is pre-filled with £100,000 — change it to your own figure or switch to Scotland.

£100,000 after tax — England, Wales & Northern Ireland

Per yearPer monthPer week
Gross salary£100,000£8,333£1,923
Income Tax−£27,432−£2,286−£528
National Insurance−£4,011−£334−£77
Take-home (net)£68,557£5,713£1,318

You keep 68.6% of your gross pay; the effective Income-Tax-plus-NI rate is 31.4%.

The full £12,570 personal allowance applies, so the first £12,570 is tax-free.

Income Tax band breakdown at £100,000

Tax bandRateTax on this band
Basic rate20%£7,540
Higher rate40%£19,892

National Insurance at £100,000

£37,700 taxed at 8% = £3,016; £49,730 taxed at 2% = £995. Total employee National Insurance: £4,011.

£100,000 after tax — Scotland

Scotland sets its own Income Tax rates and bands. National Insurance (£4,011) and the personal allowance are the same as the rest of the UK.

Per yearPer month
Income Tax (Scotland)−£30,764−£2,564
National Insurance−£4,011−£334
Take-home (net)£65,226£5,435

A Scottish taxpayer on £100,000 keeps £3,332 less a year than in the rest of the UK.

The 2025/26 bands used

Income Tax — England, Wales & Northern Ireland (on income above the £12,570 personal allowance):

Taxable incomeRate
Up to £37,70020% (basic)
£37,701 to £125,14040% (higher)
Above £125,14045% (additional)

Income Tax — Scotland (on income above the £12,570 personal allowance):

Income rangeRate
£12,571 to £15,39719% (starter)
£15,398 to £27,49120% (basic)
£27,492 to £43,66221% (intermediate)
£43,663 to £75,00042% (higher)
£75,001 to £125,14045% (advanced)
Above £125,14048% (top)

Class 1 employee National Insurance (UK-wide): 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, then 2% on earnings above £50,270.

Assumptions

This is a planning estimate for an employee on a standard tax code (1257L), Class 1 NI category A, with no pension salary sacrifice, student-loan repayments, or taxable benefits in kind. Salary sacrifice, a workplace pension, the High Income Child Benefit Charge, or a student loan would all change the result. Your payslip and P60 are the authority.

Sources & as-of