On a gross salary of £120,000 in the UK (2026/27, England), your take-home pay is £76,157 per year — £6,346 a month or £1,465 a week — after £39,432 income tax and £4,411 National Insurance. Above £100,000 the Personal Allowance shrinks by £1 for every £2 earned — at this salary it is down to £2,570, which creates an effective ~60% marginal band. The taper makes this one of the most heavily taxed brackets in the UK — of the next £1,000 you would keep only about £380. Adjust the details below.
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Estimate for 2026/27. Income tax and NI thresholds are frozen; Scotland uses different tax bands. Employer cost excludes the Employment Allowance.
=Take-home pay/ year
£28,720
Gross salary£35,000
Personal allowance£12,570
Income tax−£4,486
National Insurance−£1,794
Take-home pay£28,720
Employer costGross + employer NI
£39,500.00
Employer NI is 15% above £5,000/yr. Eligible employers can offset up to £10,500 with the Employment Allowance.
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Last updated: 11 July 2026. Tax year 2026/27: Personal Allowance £12,570, income tax 20/40/45%, employee National Insurance 8%/2%. Rates frozen through 2030/31. Source: gov.uk — Income Tax · HMRC employer rates.
⚖︎ Results are for informational purposes and do not constitute tax advice. For specific situations, consult a licensed accountant or the relevant tax authority.
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iHow it is calculated
From your gross salary two things are taken: Income Tax and National Insurance. Income tax is charged on income above the Personal Allowance (£12,570) — 20% to £50,270, 40% to £125,140, 45% above. National Insurance is 8% between £12,570 and £50,270, then 2%. Above £100,000 the Personal Allowance tapers away (£1 lost per £2), creating an effective ~60% band up to £125,140. Optional student loan and pension deductions can also apply.
take-home = gross − Income Tax − National Insurance − student loan − pension
Example — £120,000 gross (2026/27, England): Personal Allowance £2,570, taxable £117,430 → income tax £39,432, employee NI £4,411 → net £76,157 a year (£6,346/month, £1,465/week).
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?Frequently asked questions
How much is £120,000 after tax in the UK?
A £120,000 gross salary leaves about £76,157 per year net — £6,346 per month — in 2026/27 (England; Scottish bands differ slightly). Deductions: £39,432 income tax and £4,411 employee National Insurance.
Why is the marginal rate about 60% at £120,000?
Every £2 earned above £100,000 removes £1 of Personal Allowance — at this salary only £2,570 of it remains. The lost allowance is taxed at 40%, which stacks up to an effective ~60% on this slice (plus 2% NI).
What is £120,000 a year monthly and weekly after tax?
About £6,346 per month or £1,465 per week after income tax and National Insurance — an effective deduction rate of 36.5%.
What does an employee on £120,000 cost the employer?
About £137,250 per year: the £120,000 gross plus employer National Insurance (15% above £5,000) and the 3% auto-enrolment employer pension.
Does this include student loan or pension?
The headline figures assume no student loan and no employee pension; both can be switched on in the calculator above, and each plan changes the net differently.
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€Net salary for common amounts
See the full breakdown for the most searched salaries: