£75,000 After Tax 2026/27
UK Take-Home Pay
A £75,000 salary leaves you with £4,321/month take-home after PAYE tax, National Insurance, and pension in 2026/27.
Your take-home — 2026/27
How your £75,000 is split
Full deduction breakdown
2026/27 · Standard tax code 1257L · Auto-enrolment pension at 5%
| Deduction | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £75,000 | £6,250 |
| Income Tax (PAYE) | −£17,432 | −£1,453 |
| National Insurance | −£3,511 | −£293 |
| Pension (5% auto-enrolment) | −£2,202 | −£184 |
| Net Take-Home Pay | £51,856 | £4,321 |
What £75,000 means in practice
Your salary crosses into the higher rate band. You pay 20% on £12,570–£50,270 and 40% on the £24,730 above £50,270. Consider salary sacrifice pension to reduce the amount taxed at 40%.
Your National Insurance is £3,511 per year (£293/month). NI is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270. There is no NI-free personal allowance in the same way as income tax — NI starts at your Primary Threshold (£12,570 in 2026/27).
Your pension contribution under auto-enrolment is £2,202 per year. This is 5% of qualifying earnings (the £6,240–£50,270 band). Your employer contributes at least another 3% (minimum £1,321/year). That money doesn't disappear — it goes into your pension pot and receives tax relief on the way in.
- You keep 69% of your gross pay (£51,856/year)
- Tax + NI combined: £20,943/year — effective rate 27.9%
- Monthly difference gross vs net: £1,929 per month in deductions
Student loan impact (Plan 2)
On a £75,000salary, you're above the Plan 2 threshold of £29,385. You repay £4,105/year (£342/month) at 9% on earnings above the threshold.
Plan 2 loans are written off 30 years after the April after you graduated, or when you turn 65. Use our student loan calculator to model full repayment scenarios.