25 March 2026 · 6 min read

Written and reviewed by James Whitfield · Updated for 2025/26 · Editorial standards · Methodology

£30,000 After Tax UK (2025/26): Monthly Take-Home Guide

A practical UK guide to £30,000 after tax with monthly net pay figures, deduction breakdown and salary comparison steps for 2025/26.

Who this guide helps

  • UK employees comparing salary scenarios
  • People planning monthly take-home pay and deductions
  • Readers who want a practical explanation before using the calculator

What this guide covers

  1. £30,000 after tax: the key monthly figures for 2025/26
  2. Salary comparison at £30,000

At-a-glance examples (2025/26)

Typical default outputs for quick context.

Gross salaryNet monthlyNet annualOpen
£30,000 £2,093.30 £25,119.60 View page
£50,000 £3,293.30 £39,519.60 View page
£100,000 £5,713.12 £68,557.40 View page

£30,000 after tax: the key monthly figures for 2025/26

At £30,000 gross in England for 2025/26, monthly take-home pay is approximately £2,097 under standard PAYE assumptions (1257L, no student loan, no pension). The full salary sits within the basic-rate band — Income Tax at 20% on earnings above £12,570 and National Insurance at 8% on the same slice.

With a 5% employee pension contribution (£1,500/year), monthly take-home falls to approximately £1,975. Adding Plan 2 student loan repayment (9% above £27,295 for 2025/26) costs approximately £243 per year at this salary — £20/month — bringing monthly take-home with pension and Plan 2 to approximately £1,955.

In Scotland at £30,000, monthly take-home is approximately £2,077 — nearly the same as England. The 21% intermediate rate kicks in from £24,981, adding a small charge on the top slice, but the 19% starter rate on the lowest earnings band partially offsets this.

Salary comparison at £30,000

The net monthly improvement from £28,000 to £30,000 in England is approximately £124. From £30,000 to £32,000 it is approximately £127. The deduction rate is consistent within the basic-rate band, so each £2,000 increase in gross salary produces roughly the same net monthly improvement — around £120–£130.

A common planning question at this salary level is whether to use salary sacrifice for pension contributions. At £30,000, basic-rate tax relief (20%) and NI relief (8%) together mean that a £100 salary sacrifice pension contribution costs approximately £72 take-home. This makes pension salary sacrifice meaningfully efficient even at basic rate.

Use the calculator for practical scenarios

2025/26 factual reference points

Current tax-year thresholds used across this guide and calculator.

NI thresholds

  • Primary threshold: £12,570
  • Upper earnings limit: £50,270
  • Rates: 8% then 2%

Student loan plans

  • PLAN1: threshold £26,065, rate 9%
  • PLAN2: threshold £28,470, rate 9%
  • PLAN4: threshold £31,395, rate 9%
  • PLAN5: threshold £25,000, rate 9%
  • Postgraduate: threshold £21,000, rate 6%

Guide FAQ

Can I test this guide topic in the calculator?

Yes. Use the scenario links in this guide to open prefilled states, then adjust salary, region, loan and pension settings.

Are these guide pages server-rendered for indexing?

Yes. Core content is rendered in HTML and linked to salary/city/tool pages for crawlable internal navigation.

Which assumptions are most important for accuracy?

Tax region, tax code, student loan plan, pension contribution and salary sacrifice are the key assumptions to check first.

Related guides

Sources