£80k Salary After Tax
If you make £80,000 a year living in the United Kingdom, your take-home pay will be roughly £4,746 per month. Assuming a standard 1257L tax code and no pension deduction, you will pay £19,432 in Income Tax (PAYE) and £3,611 in National Insurance. Use the most modern and simplest salary calculator below to adjust your pension, student loans, and view your exact payslip.
Salary Details (UK)
UK Tax Facts (2026/27)
- Personal Allowance is £12,570
- Personal Allowance goes down by £1 for every £2 earned above £100,000
- National Insurance main rate is 8%
Salary Breakdown
Take-Home Pay (Monthly)
£4,746.45
Deductions & Taxable Income£67,430
Tax Calculation-£23,042.60
Calculated using standard UK (England/Wales/NI) progressive income tax brackets.
Class 1 Employee NI calculated strictly on a monthly payroll period basis and annualized. (8% on income between PT and UEL, 2% above UEL).
Calculations based on UK HM Revenue & Customs data for 2026/27. Does not constitute financial advice.
Is £80,000 a good salary in UK?
£80,000 is considered an excellent, high-income salary in UK. You are in the top tier of earners nationally, which comfortably supports a premium lifestyle, aggressive investments, and living in high-cost metropolitan areas.
Key Facts About a £80,000 Salary
💰 Income Breakdown
- Hourly Rate (37.5 hrs/wk)£41/hr
- Weekly Gross£1,538
- Monthly Gross£6,667
- Monthly Take-Home£4,746
📊 Tax Information
- Tax RegimeEngland/Wales/NI Rates
- Taxable Income£67,430
- Effective Tax Rate28.8%
- Personal Allowance£12,570
🏠 Upper Middle Class Lifestyle: What It Actually Means
Typical Roles
Senior Software Engineer, Medical Consultant, Head of Department
Housing
Comfortable 3-4 bed house in the Home Counties or nice London flat
Vehicle
Premium German saloons or SUVs (BMW, Audi)
Regional Impact
London/South East: Feels like £56,000
North/Wales: Feels like £100,000
Understanding £80,000 In-Hand Salary
If you earn £80,000 a year in the UK, you will be taxed £23,043. That means that your net pay will be £56,957 per year, or £4,746 per month.
Your average tax rate is 28.8%. This means that for every £100 you earn, you take home £71.2.
Where Does Your Money Go?
- Income Tax: £19,432 annually. This goes to HMRC for public services.
- National Insurance (NI): £3,611 annually. This funds the NHS, state pensions, and statutory benefits.
Tips for Maximizing Your UK Take-Home
- Salary Sacrifice Pensions: Increasing your pension contributions via Salary Sacrifice saves you both Income Tax and National Insurance, boosting your retirement fund significantly for a lower net cost.
- Beware the £100k Trap: If you earn over £100k, your Personal Allowance shrinks by £1 for every £2 earned, creating a massive 60% marginal tax rate! Increase your pension contributions to bring your adjusted net income back below £100k.
- Use your ISA Allowance: You can save up to £20,000 per year in a Stocks & Shares or Cash ISA completely tax-free. Capital gains and dividends inside an ISA are shielded from HMRC.
🏦 What Can You Actually Afford?
Based on standard UK lender criteria (4.5x income multiple for mortgages), we projected your maximum purchasing power.
Max Home Affordability
- Max Mortgage (4.5x salary): £360,000
- Est. Monthly Repayment: £2,105
- Deposit Required (15%): £63,529
*Assumes 5.0% p.a. 25-yr fixed rate repayment mortgage.
Max Car Affordability
- Max Monthly Finance: £475
- Finance Amount: £19,442
- Deposit Required (20%): £4,861
*Assumes 8.0% APR over 48 months (Hire Purchase style).
📈 Wealth Creation (Stocks & Shares ISA)
If you invest 15% of your net income (£712/month) into a global index fund using your £20k tax-free ISA allowance:
In 10 Years
In 20 Years
📊 Recommended Budget for £80,000
A common rule of thumb is the 50/30/20 budgeting rule. Based on your monthly take-home pay of £4,746.45, here is a recommended budget breakdown:
Needs
50%Rent, groceries, utilities, insurance
Wants
30%Dining out, hobbies, entertainment
Savings / Debt
20%Investments, emergency fund, debt payoff
Monthly Take-Home
Tax Rates updated for 2026/27. Data sourced from official government guidelines.