Written and reviewed by James Whitfield · Updated for 2025/26 · Editorial standards · Methodology
A practical UK guide to £30,000 after tax with monthly net pay figures, deduction breakdown and salary comparison steps 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.
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.
Current tax-year thresholds used across this guide and calculator.
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Tax region, tax code, student loan plan, pension contribution and salary sacrifice are the key assumptions to check first.