UK Salary Benchmarks & Comparisons

Is £24,000 a Good Salary in the UK? (2026)

Is £24k a good salary in the UK? Take-home pay breakdown, cost of living reality check, percentile ranking, and comparison with median UK earnings for 2026.

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

£24,000 is close to the UK median for workers under 25. It is a common salary for junior administrative, customer service, and support roles across many sectors. Here is exactly what £24,000 is worth in 2026/27 — take-home pay, UK salary rankings, and what you can realistically afford.

£24,000 After Tax — Take Home Pay 2026/27

Component Annual Monthly Weekly
Gross salary £24,000 £2,000 £462
Income tax −£2,286 −£190 −£44
National Insurance −£914 −£76 −£18
Take home pay £20,800 £1,733 £400

How the Tax Is Calculated

Band Taxable amount Rate Tax
Personal Allowance £12,570 0% £0
Basic rate £11,430 20% £2,286
Total income tax £2,286

Your income falls entirely within the basic rate band. National Insurance is charged at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270.

Is £24,000 a Good Salary in 2026?

Measure Figure
UK median full-time salary (2025) ~£29,000
Your salary £24,000
UK earnings percentile ~41th percentile
You earn more than ~41% of full-time UK workers

£24,000 is below the UK median full-time salary of approximately £29,000. It is common for early-career roles and provides a reasonable base in most parts of the UK outside London.

£24,000 Cost of Living Reality Check

Outside London

Monthly budget at £1,733 take-home:

Expense Estimated monthly cost
Rent (1-bed, most UK cities) £700–£1,000
Council tax £130–£200
Utilities (gas, electricity) £100–£150
Food and groceries £200–£300
Transport £80–£150
Subtotal (essentials) ~£1,210–£1,800
Remaining for savings/leisure £233–£523

At £24,000, careful budgeting is needed outside London, particularly in cities with higher rents.

In London

Rent for a one-bedroom flat in London averages £1,800–£2,500/month — often consuming the majority of take-home pay at this salary. Most £24,000 earners in London would need a house share or would commute from outer zones.

£24,000 With Student Loan

Plan Annual deduction Monthly take home
Plan 1 (above £24,990) £0 £1,733
Plan 2 (above £27,295) £0 £1,733
Plan 4 — Scotland (above £31,395) £0 £1,733

£24,000 in Scotland After Tax

Scottish taxpayers pay slightly more income tax at this salary level due to the starter rate band (19%) applying above the personal allowance:

England Scotland
Annual take home £20,800 ~£20,758
Monthly take home £1,733 ~£1,730
Annual difference ~£42 less

Pension Contributions at £24,000

Auto-enrolment minimum contributions (3% employer, 5% employee) reduce take-home but build retirement savings:

Contribution Monthly cost (after basic rate relief) Annual pension contribution
5% employee (auto-enrolment minimum) £80 £1,200
8% (employer + employee combined) £1,920
10% (higher voluntary) £160 £2,400

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2025
  2. HMRC — Income Tax rates and allowances