At £29,000 gross salary, estimated net pay is £2,032.34 per month and £24,388.10 per year under default assumptions (tax code 1257L, NI category A, no student loan, no pension). This page is server-rendered so the headline result and breakdown are indexable and shareable.
| Band | Rate | Taxable amount | Tax paid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starter rate | 19% | £2,162.00 | £410.78 |
| Basic rate | 20% | £10,956.00 | £2,191.20 |
| Intermediate rate | 21% | £3,312.00 | £695.52 |
| Higher rate | 42% | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Advanced rate | 45% | £0.00 | £0.00 |
| Top rate | 48% | £0.00 | £0.00 |
Threshold effects matter more than most people expect. The first part of earnings is protected by your personal allowance and lower rates, while slices above thresholds are taxed at higher marginal rates. At this salary level, small gross increases do not translate one-for-one into net monthly pay because higher-rate slices, NI, and any student loan deductions apply simultaneously.
If your long-term income moves toward six figures, personal allowance taper becomes relevant and net progression changes again. For decisions around pay rises or role changes, compare scenarios using matched assumptions rather than headline salary only.
It is an estimate using current published tax and NI rules. Real payroll may differ slightly because of timing, tax code changes, benefits in kind, bonus handling, and cumulative calculations. Use this page for planning, then reconcile with your payslip settings.
Most overestimates come from ignoring student loan or pension deductions, or assuming the whole salary is taxed at one rate. PAYE works by thresholds and slices. The combination of tax, NI and other deductions can materially reduce the monthly figure.
Use the nearby salary links below, then open the interactive calculator with matched assumptions. That lets you compare true monthly deltas around this level without changing multiple settings each time.