£60,000 Salary After Tax UK (2026/27)

By Editorial team · Published 1 Jul 2026 · Updated 1 Jul 2026

How much is £60,000 after tax in the UK?

For the 2026/27 UK tax year (rest of UK rates), a £60,000 gross salary leaves you with £45,357 after Income Tax and National Insurance — about £3,780 per month. This assumes no pension contribution and no student loan.

Monthly breakdown

Item

Annual

Monthly

Gross salary

£60,000

£5,000

Income Tax

-£11,432

-£953

National Insurance

-£3,211

-£268

Take-home

£45,357

£3,780

What changes your take-home on £60,000?

Three things move the number most: pension contributions (a 5% workplace pension drops your annual take-home to £43,617); student loans (Plan 2 adds roughly 9% on earnings above £28,470); and the personal-allowance taper, which starts at £100,000 of adjusted net income and removes the £12,570 allowance entirely by £125,140.

How £60,000 compares

The UK median full-time salary is roughly £37,000 (ONS, latest). £60,000 is above the median; use the calculator below to compare it against any other figure.

Summary

£60,000 is a common UK salary point. After Income Tax and National Insurance (no pension, no student loan), monthly take-home is £3,780. Pension contributions, student loan plans, and the £100k personal-allowance taper can shift the number meaningfully.

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Net monthly pay

£3,634.78

£43,617 / year£838.80 / week

Breakdown (annual)

Gross salary
£60,000
Pension contribution
− £3,000
Income tax
− £10,232
National Insurance
− £3,151
Take-home pay
£43,617

Estimates for the rest of UK (excl. Scotland) using a standard tax code, salary-sacrifice pension and PAYE NI. Not financial advice.

FAQs

What is the take-home pay on £60,000 in the UK?

For 2026/27, £60,000 gross gives a take-home of about £45,357 per year (£3,780 per month) before pension or student loan.

How much Income Tax is paid on £60,000?

Income Tax on £60,000 for 2026/27 is approximately £11,432 — using the £12,570 personal allowance and 20% / 40% / 45% bands.

How much National Insurance is paid on £60,000?

Employee Class 1 NI on £60,000 for 2026/27 is approximately £3,211 — 8% between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% above.

Does a 5% pension contribution affect take-home on £60,000?

Yes. A 5% workplace pension contribution reduces taxable pay, dropping annual take-home from £45,357 to £43,617 — while £3,000 goes into your pension.

What if I have a student loan on £60,000?

Student loan repayments are charged on earnings above each plan's threshold (Plan 2: £28,470 at 9%; Plan 5: £25,000 at 9%; Postgrad: £21,000 at 6%). Use the calculator below to see the exact effect.

Are these figures for 2026/27?

Yes. All numbers use 2026/27 rest-of-UK Income Tax bands and the 2026/27 employee National Insurance rates. Scottish income tax is not applied.

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