Income & Employment Guides UK — Maximise Your Earnings

Is £30k a Good Salary for My Age? — UK Benchmarks by Age Group

Is £30,000 a good salary for your age in the UK? See how £30k compares to the median salary for your age group, from your 20s through to your 50s, with take-home pay and lifestyle analysis.

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

Whether £30,000 is a “good” salary depends heavily on your age, location, and life stage. Here’s how it compares across different age groups in the UK.

£30k vs UK Median Salary by Age

Age Group Median Full-Time Salary £30k vs Median
18-21 ~£20,000-£22,000 Well above
22-29 ~£27,000-£29,000 Above average
30-39 ~£33,000-£36,000 Slightly below
40-49 ~£35,000-£38,000 Below average
50-59 ~£34,000-£36,000 Below average
60+ ~£30,000-£33,000 Around median

Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings, adjusted for 2025/26. Figures represent full-time employees.

In Your 20s — £30k Is Good

At this stage, £30k puts you ahead of most of your peers.

Age 21-24

You’re earning well above the median for your age. Most people this age earn £20,000-£26,000. Key priorities:

  • Build an emergency fund (3 months’ expenses)
  • Start workplace pension contributions
  • Consider opening a Lifetime ISA (up to £4,000/year with 25% government bonus)

Age 25-29

Still above the age group median. You’re in a solid position. Key priorities:

  • If saving for a house, a LISA gives you a £1,000/year bonus
  • Salary progression should be a focus — this is when career moves pay off most
  • Pay attention to pension auto-enrolment (minimum 5% employee, 3% employer)

Take-Home at £30k in Your 20s

Scenario Monthly Take-Home
No student loan ~£2,005
Plan 2 student loan ~£1,967
Plan 5 student loan ~£1,985

In Your 30s — £30k Is Average to Below

This is peak career-building time. £30k is manageable but you may feel the squeeze.

Age 30-34

Slightly below median. Many people in their early 30s earn £30,000-£40,000. If you’re not progressing, consider:

  • Changing employers (average 10-20% salary increase when switching)
  • Upskilling — professional qualifications can add £5,000-£15,000
  • Sector change — some sectors pay significantly more for similar skills

Age 35-39

Below median. Family costs often increase at this stage. A £30k salary supports:

  • Single person: Comfortable in most areas outside London/South East
  • Couple (dual income): Good combined with a partner’s salary
  • Single parent: Tight — may qualify for Universal Credit top-up and Child Benefit

What £30k Affords at 30-39

Expense Monthly Cost % of £2,005 Take-Home
Rent (1-bed, outside London) £600-£800 30-40%
Mortgage (£120k, 25yr, 4.5%) ~£667 33%
Council tax (Band B) £120-£150 6-7%
Food £200-£300 10-15%
Transport £100-£200 5-10%
Bills (energy, phone, broadband) £150-£200 7-10%
Remaining £255-£735 13-37%

In Your 40s — £30k Is Below Average

Most 40-somethings are at or near peak earnings.

Age 40-49

Below the median of £35,000-£38,000. However, context matters:

  • If you’re in a sector with limited progression (retail, hospitality, care), £30k may be relatively strong
  • If your mortgage was taken when rates were lower, housing costs may be manageable
  • If you’re supporting children, you’ll likely feel squeezed

Mortgage Affordability at 40 on £30k

Scenario What You Can Borrow
Sole application (4.5x) £135,000
With £20k deposit Property up to £155,000
Joint with partner (£25k) £247,500 (on £55k combined)

£135,000 buys a property in many areas of the North, Midlands, Wales, and Scotland, but not London or much of the South East.

In Your 50s — £30k Depends on Context

Your financial picture at 50 depends heavily on earlier decisions — mortgage status, pension pot, and savings.

Age 50-59

Scenario Comfort Level on £30k
Mortgage paid off Very comfortable
Mortgage nearly paid off Comfortable
Still renting Tight
Supporting adult children Tight
Single, low costs Comfortable

Pension Focus at 50

On £30k, pension contributions become critical:

Contribution Rate Annual Into Pension Pot at 67 (6% growth)
5% + 3% employer (auto-enrolment minimum) £2,400 ~£51,000 (17 years)
8% + 3% employer £3,300 ~£70,000
12% + 3% employer £4,500 ~£96,000

These figures assume starting from £0 at age 50 — if you already have a pension pot, compound growth helps significantly.

£30k by Region — Where It Goes Furthest

Region Average Rent (1-bed) £30k Comfort Level
London £1,200-£1,800 Difficult
South East £800-£1,100 Tight
South West £650-£850 Manageable
Midlands £550-£700 Comfortable
North West £500-£650 Comfortable
North East £450-£600 Very comfortable
Scotland £500-£700 Comfortable
Wales £450-£600 Very comfortable

How to Move Beyond £30k

If you want to increase from £30k, the most effective strategies by age:

In Your 20s

  • Change employer every 2-3 years (biggest salary jumps happen when switching)
  • Get professional qualifications (AAT, CIPD, PRINCE2, etc.)
  • Move to a higher-paying sector

In Your 30s-40s

  • Negotiate hard — research market rates on Glassdoor, Reed, and Hays salary guides
  • Take on management responsibility
  • Consider contracting or freelancing in your specialism
  • Relocate to a higher-paying area if feasible

In Your 50s

  • Leverage experience for senior or consultant roles
  • Focus on pension catch-up rather than dramatic salary increases
  • Consider part-time work if mortgage-free, to boost quality of life

What £30,000 Buys You at Each Life Stage

The same salary has dramatically different practical implications depending on your age and life circumstances. Here’s an honest breakdown:

Age 21–25: Good Start, Keep Moving

At 21–25, £30,000 puts you firmly ahead of your peers. The average graduate starting salary in the UK sits around £25,000–28,000, so earning £30,000 early places you in the top quartile for your age group.

The danger at this stage is complacency. The careers where people tend to stagnate at salary levels like £30k are those where there’s no natural progression route and no incentive to move firms. Focus on accumulating skills and credentials — qualifications like ACCA, CIPD, CIMA, or a professional chartership typically translate to 20%+ salary increases.

Pension priority: Even at this age, a 5-8% combined contribution is worth starting. Twenty years of compounding matters far more than the amount you contribute in your 20s. Even £100/month starting at 22 becomes approximately £92,000 by 67 (at 5% growth).

Student loans: At £30,000, Plan 2 repayments are £57/month. Plan 5 repayments are £57/month as well (6% on earnings above £25,000). For most graduates, the balance grows with inflation for years before meaningful repayment begins — focus on career growth rather than overpaying loans.

Age 26–30: The Critical Earnings Decade

Your late 20s are when career trajectories diverge sharply. People who change employers every 2–3 years or move into specialist roles typically earn £3,000–10,000 more by 30 than those who stay put. At £30,000 at 28-30, you should be asking:

  • What’s my clear path to £40k? What qualification, promotion, or employer change gets me there?
  • Do I have 3 months’ emergency savings?
  • Am I capturing my full employer pension match?
  • If buying a home is a priority, have I opened a Lifetime ISA?

Age 31–40: Time to Close the Gap

At £30,000 in your 30s, you’re earning below the UK median for your age group (the median for ages 35–44 is around £36,000–38,000). This is the decade where action matters most before pay differentials compound:

  • CPD qualifications often offer the biggest jump (management, technology, finance specialisms)
  • Employer switching still delivers the fastest increase, even more so with experience
  • Management promotion adds £3,000–10,000 in most sectors

Age 40+: Context and Planning

Earning £30,000 in your 40s or 50s typically means you’re in a role with limited upward trajectory. Focus: ensure your pension is on track, your mortgage is being repaid, and you have an ISA. A meaningful pension pot can compensate for a longer flat earnings period.

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings