Income & Employment Guides UK — Maximise Your Earnings

UK Income Distribution Explained — How Earnings Are Spread Across the Population

Visual guide to how income is distributed across the UK population. Understand percentiles, the difference between mean and median, and why inequality matters for your finances.

Salary and income data is based on ONS and other official UK statistical sources. Figures are averages and may not reflect your individual circumstances.

Understanding how incomes are distributed helps you see where you stand and why averages can be misleading. Here’s a clear guide to UK income distribution in 2026.

The Shape of UK Incomes

UK incomes follow a right-skewed distribution — most people earn modest amounts, while a small number earn much more:

Income band Share of workers Cumulative %
Under £15,000 10% 10%
£15,000–£20,000 10% 20%
£20,000–£25,000 12% 32%
£25,000–£30,000 12% 44%
£30,000–£35,000 10% 54%
£35,000–£40,000 8% 62%
£40,000–£50,000 12% 74%
£50,000–£60,000 8% 82%
£60,000–£80,000 8% 90%
£80,000–£100,000 4% 94%
£100,000–£150,000 3% 97%
£150,000–£300,000 2% 99%
Over £300,000 1% 100%

The peak concentration is the £20,000–£40,000 band, containing about 42% of all workers.

Mean vs Median: Why It Matters

Measure Amount Best for
Median individual income (FT) ~£35,000 What the “typical” person earns
Mean individual income (FT) ~£42,000 Summary including all earners
Mode (most common salary) ~£25,000–£30,000 Most frequently occurring salary

The mean is £7,000 higher than the median because high earners pull the average up. Politicians and headline writers often pick whichever number suits their argument — always check which measure is being used.

Income Percentile Table

Percentile Individual income (FT) Description
1st ~£12,000 Lowest full-time earners
5th ~£16,000 Near minimum wage
10th ~£19,000 Entry-level jobs
25th ~£24,000 Below-average earners
40th ~£30,000 Approaching median
50th (median) ~£35,000 Middle earner
60th ~£38,000 Above average
75th ~£48,000 Upper-middle earners
90th ~£65,000 Top 10%
95th ~£85,000 Top 5%
99th ~£180,000 Top 1%

The distance between each percentile is uneven. Moving from the 50th to 75th percentile is a £13,000 difference. Moving from the 90th to 99th is a £115,000 jump.

Pre-Tax vs Post-Tax Distribution

The UK tax and benefit system significantly compresses inequality:

Decile Mean pre-tax income Mean post-tax income Redistribution effect
Bottom 10% £5,000 £14,000 +£9,000 (benefits)
2nd £10,000 £16,000 +£6,000
3rd £15,000 £19,000 +£4,000
4th £21,000 £23,000 +£2,000
5th (median) £28,000 £28,000 Roughly neutral
6th £35,000 £33,000 -£2,000
7th £43,000 £39,000 -£4,000
8th £55,000 £48,000 -£7,000
9th £72,000 £60,000 -£12,000
Top 10% £140,000 £100,000 -£40,000

The bottom 40% receive more in benefits than they pay in tax. The top 40% pay more than they receive. The crossover point is roughly at the median income.

Measuring Inequality: The Gini Coefficient

The Gini coefficient ranges from 0 (perfect equality) to 1 (one person has everything):

Country Gini coefficient (disposable income)
Denmark 0.26
Norway 0.26
Sweden 0.28
Germany 0.30
France 0.30
Ireland 0.31
UK 0.35
Spain 0.33
Italy 0.33
USA 0.39

The UK’s Gini of ~0.35 means moderate inequality — more equal than the US but less equal than most of Northern Europe.

How UK Income Inequality Has Changed

Period What happened Gini
1960s–1970s Relatively equal; strong unions, high top tax rates 0.25–0.27
1980s Sharp rise in inequality; deregulation, top tax cuts 0.27→0.34
1990s Inequality peaked then stabilised 0.34–0.36
2000s Slightly reduced; tax credits introduced 0.33–0.35
2010s Broadly stable; austerity affected lower incomes 0.34–0.36
2020s Stable; inflation hit lower earners harder 0.34–0.36

The big structural shift happened in the 1980s. Since then, income inequality has remained broadly stable at a historically high level.

Regional Income Distribution

The UK has significant regional income variation:

Region Median FT salary Ratio to UK median
London £45,000 1.29×
South East £38,000 1.09×
East of England £35,500 1.01×
UK average £35,000 1.00×
Scotland £34,000 0.97×
South West £33,000 0.94×
North West £33,000 0.94×
East Midlands £32,500 0.93×
West Midlands £32,000 0.91×
Yorkshire £32,000 0.91×
Wales £31,000 0.89×
North East £31,000 0.89×
Northern Ireland £31,000 0.89×

London’s median is 45% higher than the cheapest regions — though after housing costs, the gap narrows dramatically.

Why Income Distribution Matters for Your Finances

Understanding where you sit in the distribution helps with:

Application How distribution data helps
Salary negotiation Know if you’re underpaid for your role and region
Mortgage applications Lenders assess you relative to income norms
Financial planning Understand your real spending power vs peers
Tax planning Know which thresholds and traps apply to you
Retirement planning Estimate how much state vs private pension you’ll need

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings