Written and reviewed by James Whitfield · Updated for 2026/27 · Editorial standards · Methodology
The 40% higher rate starts at £50,270 in England in 2026/27, but only on the slice above. Combined with NI, your marginal rate is 42%. See the real monthly take-home impact and pension options.
The 40% higher rate starts at £50,270 in England, but only on the slice above that threshold. With NI the combined marginal rate is 42%, and pension salary sacrifice saves this entire amount per £1 sacrificed.
In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the income tax higher rate of 40% applies to earnings above £50,270 in the 2026/27 tax year. Below this threshold, earnings above the personal allowance of £12,570 are taxed at 20% basic rate. The shift to 40% happens only on the slice of earnings above £50,270, your lower earnings are not retrospectively taxed at the higher rate.
This progressive structure means crossing the higher-rate threshold does not make you dramatically worse off. A salary of £50,271 is taxed exactly as a salary of £50,270, with the addition of 40% tax on that one extra pound above the threshold. The difference in take-home between £50,000 and £51,000 is approximately £40 per month less in tax and NI combined, not hundreds of pounds.
Scotland is different. The higher rate in Scotland begins at £43,662 and is 42% rather than 40%. This means Scottish earners cross their higher-rate threshold approximately £6,600 earlier than English earners, and the rate itself is 2 percentage points higher. For a Scottish earner on £50,000, the income between £43,662 and £50,000 is already taxed at 42%, whereas the same earner in England has no higher-rate exposure at £50,000.
On a salary of exactly £50,000 in England, the monthly income tax bill is approximately £625 (basic rate only). NI is approximately £252 per month. Total deductions: £877/month. Monthly take-home: approximately £3,290.
On a salary of £55,000 in England, the income in the 40% band is £4,730 (£55,000 minus £50,270). Annual income tax at the higher rate on that slice: £1,892. On top of the basic-rate tax bill, total annual income tax is approximately £9,428. Monthly income tax: approximately £786. NI: approximately £253/month. Monthly take-home: approximately £3,538.
The key metric is the marginal rate, the combined income tax and NI rate on each additional pound above £50,270. Above this threshold, the combined marginal rate is 42% (40% IT + 2% NI, because NI drops from 8% to 2% at exactly the same £50,270 threshold). This means for every extra £1,000 of gross pay above £50,270, you take home approximately £580.
One aspect of the higher-rate threshold that surprises many people is the simultaneous NI rate drop. At exactly £50,270, employee NI falls from 8% to 2% at the same moment income tax rises from 20% to 40%. The result is that the net marginal change at the threshold is 40-20=+20% income tax and 2-8=-6% NI = a net marginal rate increase of 14 percentage points (from 28% combined to 42% combined).
If you also have a student loan, the marginal rate is higher still. Plan 2 student loan charges an additional 9% on earnings above £27,295. At £55,000 with Plan 2, the marginal rate on earnings above £50,270 is 40% IT + 2% NI + 9% loan = 51%. Every £1,000 above the higher-rate threshold yields approximately £490 take-home net of all three deductions.
Pension salary sacrifice above the higher-rate threshold saves 42% (tax + NI combined) rather than 28% below it. If you also have a Plan 2 loan and are earning above £27,295, a salary sacrifice pension contribution above £50,270 also reduces your student loan repayment, saving an additional 9% on each sacrificed pound. This three-way saving makes pension salary sacrifice near and above the higher-rate threshold one of the most tax-efficient actions available to employed UK earners.
If your salary is above £50,270, salary sacrifice pension contributions reduce your taxable income by the full contribution amount. A contribution of £5,000 salary sacrifice at £55,000 reduces taxable pay to £50,000, putting all remaining earnings below the higher-rate threshold. Income tax falls from approximately £9,428 to approximately £7,486, a saving of £1,942. NI also falls by approximately £100. Total saving: approximately £2,042 per year for a £5,000 pension contribution. The net cost to take-home is £5,000 minus £2,042 = £2,958.
The decision to use salary sacrifice to move below the higher-rate threshold depends on your cashflow needs and time horizon. The pension saving is locked until you access it (earliest age 57 from 2028). But the tax saving is immediate, and at 42% effective relief, pension saving above the higher-rate threshold has one of the best tax-adjusted returns available to employed workers.
Alternatively, even partial sacrifice reduces the higher-rate tax bill proportionally. There is no requirement to contribute exactly to the threshold, each £1,000 salary sacrifice above £50,270 saves approximately £420 in income tax and NI, whatever the total contribution level.
No. A pay rise that moves you above the higher-rate threshold always leaves you better off in take-home terms. The misunderstanding is that the higher rate taxes all your income, it does not. It taxes only the slice above £50,270. Even at a 42% combined marginal rate on the extra earnings, you take home 58p of every extra pound above the threshold.
The rational approach is to accept the higher salary and then use pension salary sacrifice to reduce the amount sitting in the higher-rate band to a level that matches your cashflow preferences. This captures the career and gross-salary benefit while managing the portion of income taxed at 40%.
The only scenario where a pay rise could leave you worse off involves other threshold interactions, for example, the personal allowance taper at £100,000 (where the effective marginal rate is 62%), or the child benefit high-income charge which begins at £60,000. At the basic higher-rate threshold of £50,270, there is no such interaction. Crossing it is always net positive for take-home pay.
Current tax-year thresholds used across this guide and calculator.
No. Only the earnings above £50,270 are taxed at 40%. The slice below continues to be taxed at 20% basic rate. For example, on a salary of £55,000, only £4,730 (£55,000 minus £50,270) is taxed at 40%. The rest stays at 20%. This progressive structure means crossing the threshold is always net positive for take-home pay.
Above £50,270, income tax rises to 40% and NI drops to 2% (from 8%). The combined marginal rate is 42%. For each extra £1,000 gross above the threshold, you take home approximately £580 after income tax and NI. With a Plan 2 student loan added, the combined rate reaches 51%, and you keep approximately £490 per extra £1,000.
No. A pay rise always improves net take-home pay, it never makes you worse off. The marginal rate of 42% means you still keep 58p of every extra pound. The rational approach is to accept the higher salary and then use pension salary sacrifice to manage the higher-rate exposure if cashflow allows.
Yes. Use the scenario links in this guide to open prefilled states, then adjust salary, region, loan and pension settings.
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Tax region, tax code, student loan plan, pension contribution and salary sacrifice are the key assumptions to check first.