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What do you actually take home?

Enter your salary — see tax, NI, pension and student loan at a glance

2026/27 HMRC ratesNo sign upFree

Your details

£
0%
0%60%

The standard code for most UK employees. You receive the full £12,570 personal allowance tax-free.

Only relevant if you or your partner earns over £60,000 and claims Child Benefit

Your breakdown

Take-home pay

£34,480

/yr

Effective rate19.8%
Marginal rate28%
Tax bandBasic rate
Take-homeIncome TaxNI
Gross salary
£43,000
Income TaxBasic rate
−£6,086
National Insurance
−£2,434
Take-home
£34,480
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In plain English

On a £43,000 gross salary in England & Wales, you're in the Basic rate band (20% income tax). After paying £6,086 in income tax and £2,434 in National Insurance, you take home £34,480 per year — that's £2,873 a month or £663 a week. Your effective overall deduction rate is 19.8%. Every extra pound you earn above this is taxed at 28p in the pound.

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£43,000 salary after tax — 2026/27 breakdown

Annual take-home

£34,480

Monthly take-home

£2,873

Weekly take-home

£663

Tax band

Basic rate

Deductions at a glance

Gross salary£43,000
Income Tax (20%)−£6,086
National Insurance (8%)−£2,434
Take-home pay£34,480

A £43,000 salary is well above the UK median and places you among higher earners in most parts of the country. You are approaching — or within striking distance of — the higher rate income tax threshold of £50,270. Every pound of salary sacrifice pension contribution at this level saves you both income tax and National Insurance simultaneously.

After income tax and National Insurance you take home £34,480 per year — that is £2,873 per month or £663 per week. All of your taxable income falls within the basic rate band, so every pound of taxable earnings is taxed at 20%. These figures assume the standard 1257L tax code, no pension contributions and no student loan repayments.

If your salary is approaching the £50,270 higher rate threshold, pension salary sacrifice is worth considering now. Contributions made today save you 20% tax plus 8% NI, and will keep your income below the threshold where the 40% rate kicks in. Use the calculator above to see how different pension percentages affect your monthly take-home.

Frequently asked questions

How much is £43,000 a year after tax?

On a £43,000 salary in England and Wales for 2026/27, your take-home pay is £34,480 per year — that's £2,873 per month or £663 per week. This assumes the standard 1257L tax code, no pension contributions and no student loan.

How much income tax do I pay on £43,000?

You pay no tax on the first £12,570 (your personal allowance). The remaining £30,430 is taxed at the basic rate of 20%, giving an income tax bill of £6,086 per year.

How much National Insurance do I pay on £43,000?

National Insurance is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270. On a £43,000 salary that is 8% of £30,430, coming to £2,434 per year.

Is £43,000 a good salary in the UK?

£43,000 is well above the UK median full-time salary of around £35,000 and puts you among higher earners in most parts of the country. The £2,873 monthly take-home gives you real flexibility for savings, investments and lifestyle spending. At this salary level, making the most of pension contributions becomes increasingly important for tax efficiency.

How can I keep my income below the higher rate threshold on £43,000?

The higher rate threshold is £50,270. With a £43,000 salary, you are £7,270 away from paying 40% tax on additional income. Salary sacrifice pension contributions reduce your adjusted net income, potentially keeping you within the basic rate band. Each pound contributed costs you roughly 28p in lost take-home (20% tax + 8% NI saved) but adds a full pound to your pension pot.