£100,000 Salary — Take Home Pay UK 2026/27

See exactly what you take home on a £100,000 salary after tax, National Insurance and other deductions.

Your £100,000 Salary Breakdown

Annual

Gross
£100,000.00
Income Tax
−£27,432.00
NI
−£4,010.60
Take Home
£68,557.40

Monthly

Gross
£8,333.33
Income Tax
−£2,286.00
NI
−£334.22
Take Home
£5,713.12

Weekly

Gross
£1,923.08
Income Tax
−£527.54
NI
−£77.13
Take Home
£1,318.41

Daily

Gross
£384.62
Income Tax
−£105.51
NI
−£15.43
Take Home
£263.68

31.4%

Effective rate

Combined income tax + NI as a percentage of your gross salary. Lower than your marginal rate because of the tax-free Personal Allowance.

Based on 2026/27 tax rates, standard 1257L tax code, England & Wales. No pension contributions or student loan deductions.

Customise your calculation

Add pension contributions, student loans, salary sacrifice and more.

Open with £100,000

How Tax is Calculated on £100,000

Income tax is calculated by applying each band rate only to the slice of income that falls within that band — not to your whole salary.

BandRangeRateTax
Personal Allowance£0 – £12,5700%
Basic Rate£12,570 – £50,27020%£7,540.00
Higher Rate£50,270 – £100,00040%£19,892.00
Total income tax£27,432.00
Income tax −£27,432.00
National Insurance (Class 1) −£4,010.60
Total deductions −£31,442.60
Take-home pay £68,557.40

Impact of a 5% Pension Contribution

Contributing 5% of your salary into a salary sacrifice pension reduces your take-home pay by less than the contribution itself — because you save income tax and National Insurance on the amount sacrificed.

Without pension

Gross salary
£100,000.00
Income tax
−£27,432.00
National Insurance
−£4,010.60
Take home
£68,557.40

With 5% salary sacrifice

Gross salary
£100,000.00
Pension (5%)
−£5,000.00
Income tax
−£25,432.00
National Insurance
−£3,910.60
Take home
£65,657.40
Result: A £5,000.00/year pension contribution only reduces take-home by £2,900.00/year (£241.67/month) — a saving of £2,100.00 compared to contributing from net pay.
Model your own pension contribution

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the take-home pay on a £100,000 salary in 2026/27?
On a £100,000 salary in 2026/27, your estimated take-home pay is £68,557.40 per year, or £5,713.12 per month (£1,318.41 per week), after income tax and National Insurance deductions. This assumes a standard 1257L tax code with no pension contributions or student loan.
How much income tax do I pay on £100,000?
On a £100,000 salary you pay approximately £27,432.00 in income tax per year (£2,286.00/month). This includes 20% basic rate tax on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, and 40% higher rate tax on the remainder above £50,270.
How much National Insurance do I pay on £100,000?
Your National Insurance contributions on a £100,000 salary are approximately £4,010.60 per year (£334.22/month). You pay 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% on earnings above the Upper Earnings Limit of £50,270.
What is the effective tax rate on £100,000?
Your effective tax rate on a £100,000 salary is approximately 31.4% when combining income tax and National Insurance. This is lower than your marginal rate because the Personal Allowance (£12,570) and the structure of the tax bands mean not all of your income is taxed at the highest rate.
Is £100,000 a good salary in the UK?
The UK median full-time salary is around £35,000 (ONS 2024). A £100,000 salary puts you above the national median. At this level you are in approximately the top 5% of UK earners.
How does a pension affect take-home pay on £100,000?
A 5% pension contribution on a £100,000 salary reduces your gross pay by £5,000.00 per year. With a salary sacrifice arrangement you save income tax and National Insurance on that amount, so the actual cost to your take-home is less than the headline contribution. Use the full calculator to model exact figures for your pension type.
What does it mean to be a higher-rate taxpayer on £100,000?
As a higher-rate taxpayer, you pay 40% income tax on earnings above £50,270 (the higher rate threshold). This means each additional £1 earned above this point costs you 40p in tax plus 2p in National Insurance — a marginal rate of 42%. It also means you can claim higher-rate pension tax relief, and any Gift Aid donations get an extra 20% relief you claim via self-assessment.

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