A £40,000 salary places you comfortably above the UK median income. Here’s exactly how much income tax and National Insurance you’ll pay in the 2026/27 tax year — and how much you’ll actually take home.
Tax on £40,000 Salary: Quick Summary
| Annual | Monthly | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £40,000 | £3,333.33 | £769.23 |
| Income tax | £5,486 | £457.17 | £105.50 |
| National Insurance | £2,194.40 | £182.87 | £42.20 |
| Take-home pay | £32,319.60 | £2,693.30 | £621.53 |
Your effective tax rate on £40,000 is 19.2% — meaning for every £100 you earn, you keep about £80.80.
How Income Tax is Calculated on £40,000
Income tax in the UK works on a progressive system. You don’t pay tax on your entire salary — only on earnings above your Personal Allowance of £12,570.
2026/27 Income Tax Bands
| Band | Taxable income | Tax rate |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £0 – £12,570 | 0% |
| Basic rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% |
| Higher rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% |
| Additional rate | Over £125,140 | 45% |
Step-by-Step Tax Calculation
Step 1: Subtract your Personal Allowance
- £40,000 − £12,570 = £27,430 taxable income
Step 2: Apply the basic rate (20%)
- £27,430 × 20% = £5,486 income tax
At £40,000, you’re comfortably within the basic rate band. You have £10,270 of headroom before you start paying higher rate tax (which begins at £50,271 taxable income, or £50,270 + £12,570 = £62,840 gross if you have full Personal Allowance).
National Insurance on £40,000
National Insurance (NI) contributions qualify you for State Pension and certain benefits. For employees in 2026/27:
| Earnings | NI rate |
|---|---|
| Below £12,570 (Primary Threshold) | 0% |
| £12,570 – £50,270 (Upper Earnings Limit) | 8% |
| Above £50,270 | 2% |
Calculation
- Earnings subject to NI: £40,000 − £12,570 = £27,430
- NI contribution: £27,430 × 8% = £2,194.40 per year
That’s approximately £182.87 per month deducted from your pay.
Complete Monthly Payslip Breakdown
Here’s what your payslip should show each month on a £40,000 salary with no additional deductions:
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross monthly pay | £3,333.33 |
| Income tax | −£457.17 |
| National Insurance | −£182.87 |
| Net monthly pay | £2,693.30 |
If your actual take-home differs significantly, check your tax code. The standard code for one job with no adjustments is 1257L.
How £40,000 Compares to UK Salaries
A £40,000 salary in 2026 places you:
- Above the UK median full-time salary (~£35,000)
- In the top 35% of UK earners
- Comfortable across most of the UK including some London zones
- Typical for mid-career professionals, teachers with responsibilities, police sergeants, and experienced nurses
For context, you’d need roughly £30,000–£35,000 take-home for a comfortable family lifestyle in a typical UK city according to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation’s minimum income standards.
Take-Home Pay on £40k With Common Deductions
Your actual take-home depends on your personal circumstances:
With Student Loan (Plan 2)
Plan 2 student loans (started September 2012 onwards) are repaid at 9% of earnings above £27,295:
| Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|
| Earnings above threshold | £40,000 − £27,295 = £12,705 |
| Student loan deduction | £12,705 × 9% = £1,143.45/year |
| Monthly deduction | £95.29 |
| New monthly take-home | £2,598.01 |
With Student Loan (Plan 1)
Plan 1 loans (before 2012) have a lower threshold of £24,990:
| Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|
| Earnings above threshold | £40,000 − £24,990 = £15,010 |
| Student loan deduction | £15,010 × 9% = £1,350.90/year |
| Monthly deduction | £112.58 |
| New monthly take-home | £2,580.72 |
With 5% Pension Contribution
If your employer operates a salary sacrifice pension scheme with 5% employee contribution:
| Effect | Amount |
|---|---|
| Pension contribution | £40,000 × 5% = £2,000/year |
| Income tax saved | £2,000 × 20% = £400 |
| NI saved (salary sacrifice) | £2,000 × 8% = £160 |
| Real cost of £2,000 pension | £1,440 |
With salary sacrifice, your £2,000 pension contribution only “costs” you £1,440 in reduced take-home — a 28% boost compared to saving after tax.
Complete Example: Pension + Student Loan (Plan 2)
| Monthly breakdown | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross pay | £3,333.33 |
| Pension (5% salary sacrifice) | −£166.67 |
| Adjusted gross | £3,166.67 |
| Income tax | −£423.83 |
| National Insurance | −£169.53 |
| Student loan | −£95.29 |
| Net take-home | £2,312.35 |
6 Ways to Reduce Your Tax on £40,000
1. Maximise Pension Contributions
At £40,000, you’re a basic rate taxpayer getting 20% tax relief on pension contributions. Through salary sacrifice, you additionally save 8% National Insurance — a total 28% boost.
Example: Contribute an extra £200/month to your pension. Cost to your take-home: £144/month. Value in your pension: £200/month.
👉 How pension tax relief works
2. Claim Marriage Allowance
If your spouse or civil partner earns under £12,570, they can transfer £1,260 of unused Personal Allowance to you. This reduces your tax by £252 per year.
3. Use Salary Sacrifice for Benefits
Beyond pensions, salary sacrifice for childcare vouchers, cycle-to-work schemes, or electric car schemes can reduce your taxable income and save both income tax and NI.
Cycle to Work: A £1,000 bike costs you approximately £720 via salary sacrifice (28% saving).
4. Claim Professional Subscriptions
If you pay for work-related professional memberships (ACCA, CIPD, BMA, Law Society, etc.) that HMRC approves, you can claim tax relief. At 20%, a £300 subscription saves you £60.
👉 HMRC list of approved professional bodies
5. Make Gift Aid Donations
Charitable donations through Gift Aid extend your basic rate band. A £100 donation costs you £100 but the charity receives £125. This can be useful if you’re close to higher rate threshold (less relevant at £40k but good practice).
6. Check Your Tax Code
The correct code for one job with no adjustments is 1257L. Common errors include:
- BR — taxed at 20% with no Personal Allowance (wrong for your main job)
- D0 — taxed at 40% (emergency code)
- K codes — reducing your Personal Allowance for benefits in kind
£40,000 After Tax by Region
Your £32,320 annual take-home (£2,693/month) stretches differently across the UK:
| Region | Avg monthly rent (1-bed) | After rent | Lifestyle rating |
|---|---|---|---|
| London (Zone 1-2) | £2,000+ | £693 | Tight |
| London (Zone 3-4) | £1,500 | £1,193 | Manageable |
| Manchester | £950 | £1,743 | Comfortable |
| Birmingham | £900 | £1,793 | Comfortable |
| Leeds | £850 | £1,843 | Comfortable |
| Edinburgh | £1,100 | £1,593 | Good |
| Bristol | £1,100 | £1,593 | Good |
| Newcastle | £750 | £1,943 | Very comfortable |
On £40,000, you can live independently in most UK cities. Inner London requires sharing or longer commutes, but outer zones are feasible for singles.
Salary Progression: From £40k to Higher Rate
Here’s how your tax changes as you approach and cross the higher rate threshold:
| Salary | Income Tax | NI | Take-Home | Marginal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £40,000 | £5,486 | £2,194 | £32,320 | 28% |
| £45,000 | £6,486 | £2,594 | £35,920 | 28% |
| £50,000 | £7,432 | £2,994 | £39,574 | 28% |
| £50,270 | £7,486 | £3,016 | £39,768 | 28% → 42% |
| £55,000 | £9,372 | £3,111 | £42,517 | 42% |
| £60,000 | £11,432 | £3,211 | £45,357 | 42% |
Key threshold: At £50,271, your marginal rate jumps from 28% to 42% (40% income tax + 2% NI). Additional earnings are taxed more heavily once you cross this line.
If you’re offered a pay rise from £49,000 to £52,000, calculate carefully — you still benefit, but less per additional pound than below the threshold.
£40,000 With Benefits in Kind
If your employer provides taxable benefits, these affect your take-home:
Company Car Example
A company car with a P11D value of £30,000 and 30% BIK rate:
- Taxable benefit: £30,000 × 30% = £9,000
- Additional tax: £9,000 × 20% = £1,800/year (£150/month)
This effectively reduces your take-home to £2,543/month — though you’re getting a car worth considerably more.
Private Medical Insurance
Average PMI taxable value: £500-£1,500/year
- Additional tax: ~£100-£300/year
- Usually good value given actual policy costs of £1,000-£3,000
Key Takeaways
- On £40,000, you pay approximately £5,486 income tax and £2,194 National Insurance
- Your take-home is around £32,320 per year or £2,693 per month
- This places you above the UK median — comfortable in most regions
- You’re a basic rate taxpayer with room before reaching the higher rate threshold
- Salary sacrifice pensions are particularly effective, saving 28% on contributions
- Student loans can reduce take-home by £95–£113 per month
Tax calculations based on 2026/27 HMRC rates. Individual circumstances may vary. This guide is for informational purposes and is not financial or tax advice.