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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

£47,677

/yr

Effective rate25.5%
Marginal rate42%
Tax bandHigher rate
Take-homeIncome TaxNI
Gross salary
£64,000
Income TaxHigher rate
−£13,032
National Insurance
−£3,291
Take-home
£47,677
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In plain English

On a £64,000 gross salary in England & Wales, you're in the Higher rate band (40% income tax). After paying £13,032 in income tax and £3,291 in National Insurance, you take home £47,677 per year — that's £3,973 a month or £917 a week. Your effective overall deduction rate is 25.5%. Every extra pound you earn above this is taxed at 42p in the pound.

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£64,000 salary after tax — 2026/27 breakdown

Annual take-home

£47,677

Monthly take-home

£3,973

Weekly take-home

£917

Tax band

Higher rate

Deductions at a glance

Gross salary£64,000
Income Tax (20% / 40%)−£13,032
National Insurance (8% / 2%)−£3,291
Take-home pay£47,677

A £64,000 salary puts you firmly in the higher rate income tax band (above £50,270). You pay 40% income tax on every pound above that threshold, and National Insurance drops to just 2% above the upper earnings limit of £50,270. Pension contributions via salary sacrifice are especially effective at this level, saving you 40% income tax plus 2% NI on each pound contributed.

After income tax and National Insurance you take home £47,677 per year — that is £3,973 per month or £917 per week. Your income spans both the basic rate (20%) and higher rate (40%) tax bands. These figures assume the standard 1257L tax code, no pension contributions and no student loan repayments.

At this salary level, salary sacrifice pension contributions are especially tax-efficient: each pound contributed saves you 40p in income tax plus 2p in NI — a combined saving of 42p per pound. If you or your partner receive Child Benefit, contributions that reduce your adjusted net income below £60,000 can also eliminate or reduce the High Income Child Benefit Charge. Use the calculator above to model the impact.

Frequently asked questions

How much is £64,000 a year after tax?

On a £64,000 salary in England and Wales for 2026/27, your take-home pay is £47,677 per year — that's £3,973 per month or £917 per week. This assumes the standard 1257L tax code, no pension contributions and no student loan.

How much income tax do I pay on £64,000?

You pay no tax on the first £12,570 (your personal allowance). The next £37,700 (from £12,570 to £50,270) is taxed at the basic rate of 20%, giving £7,540. The remaining £13,730 above £50,270 is taxed at 40%, adding £5,492. Total income tax: £13,032 per year.

How does National Insurance work on £64,000?

NI is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270 (£37,700 = £3,016), then drops to 2% on earnings above the upper threshold. On the £13,730 above £50,270 you pay £275 in NI. Total NI: £3,291 per year.

What is the higher rate income tax threshold and how does it affect me?

The higher rate threshold for 2026/27 is £50,270. Any taxable income above this figure is taxed at 40% rather than 20%. On a £64,000 salary, the £13,730 above the threshold costs you an additional 20% in income tax compared to basic rate payers. Salary sacrifice pension contributions are particularly effective here as they directly reduce the income subject to 40% tax.

How can I reduce my income tax on £64,000?

Salary sacrifice pension contributions are the most powerful tool available at this salary. Each pound contributed reduces your income tax by 40p and your NI by 2p — a combined saving of 42p per pound. If you receive Child Benefit, contributions can also help you avoid the High Income Child Benefit Charge, which applies to adjusted net incomes above £60,000. Use the calculator to find the contribution level that optimises your take-home.