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 |