Like-for-like take-home pay comparison for 2026/27 using England income tax rates, 2026/27 NI rates (Category A), standard personal allowance (tax code 1257L) and no pension or student loan deductions. Reviewed by James Whitfield.
The gross salary difference is £5,000 per year. The net take-home difference is £2,650.00 per year — because the higher salary is taxed at the marginal rate that applies to the additional income, not the average rate on the whole salary.
| Deduction | £161,000 | £166,000 |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £161,000.00 | £166,000.00 |
| Income tax | −£59,281.50 | −£61,531.50 |
| National Insurance | −£5,230.60 | −£5,330.60 |
| Annual take-home | £96,487.90 | £99,137.90 |
| Monthly take-home | £8,040.66 | £8,261.49 |
| Effective deduction rate | 40.1% | 40.3% |
Assumptions: 2026/27 tax year, England, tax code 1257L, no student loan, no pension. Full methodology.
A gross salary difference of £5,000 translates to a net monthly difference of approximately £220.83. This is because marginal tax and National Insurance reduce the take-home value of each additional pound of earnings. At the income level of the higher salary, the marginal combined rate (income tax plus NI) determines how much of the gross increase you actually keep.
Effective deduction rates differ between the two salaries because the UK system is progressive: the personal allowance covers the first £12,570 tax-free, the 20% basic rate applies up to £50,270, and the 40% higher rate applies above that. The gap between gross salary and monthly take-home grows as earnings increase, which is why the monthly difference between two salaries is always smaller than the monthly gross difference.
This comparison uses default assumptions. If student loan repayments, pension contributions or a different tax code apply, use the full calculator to model your actual situation.