UK Salary Benchmarks & Comparisons

Is £45,000 a Good Salary in the UK? 2026 Guide

Is £45,000 a good salary in the UK? It puts you in the top 30% of full-time earners, well above the median. Here's what it means for your take-home pay, lifestyle, and finances in 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.

£45,000 is a genuinely good salary in the UK — above the national median by around 20% and placing you in the top third of full-time earners. It is the kind of salary that begins to open up real financial choices: independent renting, meaningful savings, and homeownership in much of the country.

See our take-home pay on £45,000 guide for the full tax breakdown, and our salary by profession guide to see how it compares in your industry.

Where £45,000 Ranks in the UK

Measure Value £45,000 comparison
UK median full-time salary (ONS 2024) ~£37,430 20% above
UK mean full-time salary ~£42,500 6% above mean
Top quartile threshold (approx.) ~£52,000 Approaching top 25%
London median full-time salary ~£43,000 Slightly above London median
Approximate percentile (full-time) 65th–70th Top third of UK earners
Higher-rate tax threshold £50,270 £5,270 below — fully in basic rate

Important: At £45,000 you pay all your income tax at the basic rate (20%). You have £5,270 before crossing into the 40% higher-rate band. Be aware of this threshold if you receive a bonus or overtime that pushes you above £50,270.

Your Take-Home Pay on £45,000 (2026/27)

Deduction Annual Monthly
Gross salary £45,000 £3,750
Income tax (20%) £6,486 £541
National Insurance (8%) £2,594 £216
Take-home (before pension) £35,920 £2,993

With minimum auto-enrolment pension (5% employee on qualifying earnings):

Annual Monthly
Pension contribution (employee 5%) £1,938 £162
Employer contribution (3% minimum) £1,163 £97
Take-home after pension £33,982 £2,832

Your employer’s 3% pension contribution (£1,163/year) represents a meaningful addition to your long-term savings that does not come out of your take-home.

For the full tax breakdown including student loan and Scottish rate scenarios, see our take-home pay on £45,000 guide.

What Can You Afford on £45,000?

Monthly Budget: Outside London (Own Place)

Expense Monthly estimate
Rent or mortgage (1–2 bed) £700–£1,000
Council tax £130–£180
Utilities and broadband £120–£180
Food and groceries £250–£350
Transport £80–£200
Phone and subscriptions £50–£80
Total essentials £1,330–£1,990
Remaining (take-home £2,993) £1,003–£1,663

Outside London, £45,000 is very comfortable. After covering all essentials, you have approximately £1,000–£1,650/month for savings, investments, lifestyle, and building a deposit.

Monthly Budget: London (Zone 2–4 flat)

Expense Monthly estimate
Rent (1-bed, Zones 2–4) £1,400–£1,900
Transport (Travelcard or car) £200–£280
Food and utilities £450–£600
Total essentials £2,050–£2,780
Take-home (£2,993) £213–£943 remaining

In London, £45,000 is workable but leaves limited room for savings if you live independently. Sharing a flat or living with a partner significantly improves your position.

£45,000 by Region

Region Is £45,000 good?
North East Excellent — well above regional median
Yorkshire & Humber Excellent — top 25–30% of regional earners
East Midlands Very good — above regional average
West Midlands Very good — above regional average
North West Very good — above regional average
Wales Excellent — comfortably above regional median
Scotland Very good — above Scottish median
South East Good — broadly at regional median
South West Good — slightly above regional average
East of England Around or slightly below regional median
London Average — at or slightly above London median

Mortgages at £45,000

Multiple Mortgage amount
4× salary £180,000
4.5× salary £202,500

With a 10% deposit, you can target a property up to approximately £200,000–£225,000. This opens up:

  • Detached and semi-detached houses across the North, Midlands, Wales, and Scotland
  • 2–3 bedroom properties in many Midlands and Northern cities
  • 1–2 bedroom flats in many areas of the South East (with a good deposit)
  • Not enough for a standalone London property — though possible with a partner

Joint mortgage: With a partner also on £45,000, you could borrow £360,000–£405,000 — enough for most areas of England outside prime London.

The £50,270 Tax Cliff: Planning Ahead

At £45,000 you are £5,270 below the higher-rate tax threshold. If you receive a pay rise, bonus, or promotion that pushes your income above £50,270, you will start paying 40% tax on earnings above that point.

Strategic options to manage this:

  • Pension contributions: Each pound paid into a pension reduces your taxable income. An additional £5,270 pension contribution would keep you entirely within the basic rate band
  • Salary sacrifice: Some employers offer salary sacrifice schemes for pensions or other benefits, reducing your gross pay and therefore your tax

See our income tax guide for a full explanation of how the bands work.

Saving and Investing at £45,000

With £1,000–£1,650/month to spare outside London, £45,000 allows meaningful wealth-building:

Goal How long at £500/month saving
Emergency fund (£5,000) ~10 months
House deposit (£20,000) ~3.3 years
Stocks & shares ISA (£10,000/year) Achievable — still leaves room for other goals
Pension pot of £100,000 At £500/month + employer match + growth, roughly 12–15 years

See our ISA allowance guide and our average UK salary guide for broader financial planning context at this income level.

Summary

  • £45,000 is a good salary — 20% above the national median, top 30–35% of full-time earners
  • Take-home is £2,993/month (before pension); £2,832/month with minimum pension
  • All income is taxed at the basic rate (20%) — you are £5,270 below higher rate
  • Outside London, it is very comfortable; in London, it is around average and requires budgeting
  • Mortgage borrowing of £180,000–£202,500 opens up most of the country outside the South East

What Jobs Pay £45,000 in the UK?

Job title Typical sector Notes
Senior software developer Technology 5–8 years’ experience, non-London
NHS Band 7 Healthcare Advanced practitioner or senior specialist
Experienced project manager Construction / IT 5+ years, managing teams
Senior solicitor Legal Regional firm, 3–5 years PQE
Finance manager Various Qualified accountant (ACCA/CIMA/ACA)
Secondary school deputy head Education Mid-career leadership
Civil / structural engineer (chartered) Engineering CEng status
Commercial manager Retail / FMCG Buying or trading role
Data analyst (senior) Technology / finance 5+ years, specialised

Salary Progression from £45,000

Next milestone Typical route Timeline
£48,000–£50,000 Pay review / internal promotion 1–3 years
£50,000–£60,000 Senior specialist or head of department 3–5 years
£60,000+ Director-level or partnership track 5+ years

Earning £45,000 puts you comfortably above the UK median (around £35,000), in the top 25% of UK earners.

Salary Tools and Guides

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2024
  2. GOV.UK — Income Tax rates and allowances