Income & Employment Guides UK — Maximise Your Earnings

Is £25k a Good Salary in the UK? — What It Really Means in 2026

Is £25,000 a good salary? See where it ranks nationally, your take-home pay after tax, what you can afford, and how it compares by age and region.

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

£25,000 is a common salary for early-career workers and entry-level positions across the UK. Here’s what it really means for your finances.

Where £25,000 Ranks

Measure Amount £25k comparison
National Living Wage (full-time) ~£23,400 Slightly above
UK median full-time salary ~£35,000 Below average
UK mean full-time salary ~£39,000 Well below
25th percentile ~£25,000 Around this level

About 25% of full-time workers earn £25,000 or less.

Your Take-Home Pay

Deduction Annual Monthly
Gross salary £25,000 £2,083
Income tax £2,486 £207
National Insurance £1,477 £123
Take-home £21,037 £1,753

With Student Loan

Loan plan Monthly repayment Take-home after loan
No loan £0 £1,753
Plan 1 £30 £1,723
Plan 2 £20 £1,733
Plan 5 £20 £1,733

Monthly Budget on £25,000

Expense Outside London London
Rent (room in shared house) £400-£600 £650-£900
Council tax (share) £80-£120 £80-£130
Utilities and broadband (share) £80-£120 £80-£120
Food and groceries £200-£300 £250-£350
Transport £60-£150 £150-£200 (Oyster)
Phone £20-£40 £20-£40
Insurance £20-£50 £20-£50
Total essentials £860-£1,380 £1,250-£1,790
Left over £373-£893 £0-£503

Living alone in London on £25,000 is very difficult. Most people at this salary share accommodation.

Regional Comparison

Region Average salary Is £25k good here?
London ~£44,000 Below average — tight
South East ~£37,000 Below average
East of England ~£34,000 Below average
South West ~£32,000 Slightly below
West Midlands ~£32,000 Slightly below
North West ~£32,000 Slightly below
Yorkshire ~£31,000 Close to average
North East ~£30,000 Close to average
Wales ~£30,000 Close to average
Scotland ~£33,000 Below average
Northern Ireland ~£29,000 About average

By Age Group

Age Typical percentile for £25k Context
18-21 Above average Good for your age
22-25 Average Typical graduate starting salary outside London
26-30 Below average Most peers earning more
31-40 Well below average Career development may help
41+ Below average Consider upskilling or career change

How to Make £25,000 Work

Strategy Potential saving
Share accommodation £200-£500/month vs living alone
Use comparison sites for bills £100-£300/year
Meal plan and cook at home £100-£200/month
Cycle or walk commute £50-£150/month
Use cashback and discount apps £20-£50/month
Claim all eligible benefits Council tax reduction, UC top-up possible

Benefits You May Be Eligible For

Benefit Eligibility at £25k
Council Tax Reduction Possibly (depends on circumstances)
Universal Credit Possibly (if single, no children, high rent area)
Help to Save If receiving UC or Working Tax Credit
Pension auto-enrolment Yes — employer must contribute

What You Can Actually Do on £25,000

Numbers on paper only tell part of the story. Here’s an honest, practical picture of life on £25,000 in different situations:

Single person, outside London: Renting a room in a shared house (£450–£600/month), eating well, running a modest car or using public transport, and saving £100–£200/month is entirely achievable. You’re not rich, but you’re not struggling either. You can go out, have a social life, and build an emergency fund.

Single person, London: Very tough to live alone. A shared room in London starts at £700–£900/month, and your £1,784 take-home is heavily absorbed by rent, transport (£150+/month Travelcard), and food. Saving is difficult. Many people on £25,000 in London live with family or in cramped house-shares.

Couple, both earning £25,000: Combined take-home of ~£3,568/month gives you comfortable dual income. You can rent a decent one-bedroom flat in most UK cities, save meaningfully (perhaps £400–£600/month combined), and begin a house deposit journey.

The Regional £25,000 Gap

The purchasing power of £25,000 varies enormously across the UK:

Region Median wage £25k vs median 1-bed rent What’s left after rent
London ~£44,000 -43% ~£1,600+/month ~£184/month
South East ~£37,000 -32% ~£1,100/month ~£684/month
Yorkshire ~£31,000 -19% ~£650/month ~£1,134/month
Wales ~£30,000 -17% ~£600/month ~£1,184/month
North East ~£30,000 -17% ~£575/month ~£1,209/month

In the North East or Wales, £25,000 allows you to live independently, save modestly, and have a reasonable quality of life. In London, the same salary is genuinely difficult to live on alone.

Sectors Where £25,000 Is Your Ceiling vs Launchpad

Not all £25,000 salaries are equal. The long-term trajectory matters enormously:

£25k as a launchpad (expect to pass £40k within 5 years):

  • Technology / software development
  • Finance (graduate scheme or actuarial)
  • Consulting (Big 4 and similar)
  • Law (paralegal/trainee route)
  • Chartered accountancy (ACA/ACCA training)

£25k as a ceiling or slow-growth sector:

  • Care work and social care
  • Hospitality management (lower end)
  • Retail management (below senior level)
  • Some public sector support roles
  • Early years / childcare

If you’re in a launchpad sector, £25,000 at 22–24 is entirely fine — you’ll grow past it quickly. If you’re in a slow-growth sector, consider whether additional qualifications, lateral moves, or sector switches could accelerate progression.

Benefits You May Be Eligible For

Benefit Eligibility at £25k
Council Tax Reduction Possibly (depends on circumstances)
Universal Credit Possibly (if single, no children, high rent area)
Help to Save If receiving UC or Working Tax Credit
Pension auto-enrolment Yes — employer must contribute

Moving Beyond £25,000

Strategy Potential increase
Ask for a pay rise 3–10% (with evidence of performance)
Switch employer 10–20% (biggest salary jumps)
Gain qualifications £3,000–£10,000+ over time
Move to higher-paying industry Variable
Start a side hustle £200–£1,000+/month

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings