A £30,000 salary puts you in the basic rate tax band with a straightforward tax calculation. Here’s exactly what you take home after all deductions in 2026/27.
£30,000 Salary Breakdown 2026/27
| Component | Annual | Monthly | Weekly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £30,000 | £2,500 | £577 |
| Income tax | -£3,486 | -£291 | -£67 |
| National Insurance | -£1,394 | -£116 | -£27 |
| Take home pay | £25,120 | £2,093 | £483 |
How the Tax Is Calculated
| Band | Taxable amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Basic rate | £17,430 | 20% | £3,486 |
| Total income tax | £3,486 |
National Insurance on £30,000
| Earnings band | Amount | Rate | NI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to £12,570 (Primary Threshold) | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| £12,570–£30,000 | £17,430 | 8% | £1,394 |
| Total employee NI | £1,394 |
Your employer also pays 13.8% NI on your earnings above £5,000, adding £3,450 to your employment cost.
£30,000 After Tax With Student Loan
| Deduction | Plan 1 | Plan 2 | Plan 4 | Plan 5 | Postgrad |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Threshold | £24,990 | £27,295 | £31,395 | £25,000 | £21,000 |
| Rate | 9% | 9% | 9% | 9% | 6% |
| Annual deduction | £451 | £244 | £0 | £450 | £540 |
| Take home after SL | £24,669 | £24,876 | £25,120 | £24,670 | £24,580 |
Plan 4 student loans (Scottish graduates) don’t trigger repayments until earnings exceed £31,395, so you’re unaffected at £30,000.
£30,000 After Tax in Scotland
Scottish income tax rates differ from the rest of the UK:
| Band | Taxable amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Starter rate | £2,306 (to £14,876) | 19% | £438 |
| Basic rate | £10,752 (to £25,628) | 20% | £2,150 |
| Intermediate rate | £4,372 (to £30,000) | 21% | £918 |
| Total Scottish income tax | £3,506 | ||
| Take home (Scotland) | £25,100 |
At £30,000 you pay about £20 more tax in Scotland than in England due to the intermediate rate band. The difference is minimal at this salary level.
What Your £30,000 Salary Means Per Hour
Assuming a standard 37.5-hour working week:
| Measure | Gross | After tax |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly | £15.38 | £12.88 |
| Daily (7.5 hrs) | £115.38 | £96.62 |
| Weekly | £576.92 | £483.08 |
| Monthly | £2,500 | £2,093 |
That’s £2.88 above the National Living Wage of £12.50 per hour before tax.
Impact of Pension Contributions
If your employer auto-enrols you at the minimum 5% employee contribution:
| Without pension | With 5% pension | |
|---|---|---|
| Pension deduction | £0 | £1,500 |
| Taxable income | £30,000 | £28,500 |
| Income tax | £3,486 | £3,186 |
| NI | £1,394 | £1,274 |
| Take home | £25,120 | £23,540 |
| Pension pot (annual) | £0 | £1,500 + employer match |
You lose £1,580 from take home pay but gain £1,500 in your pension (pre-tax), plus your employer’s minimum 3% contribution (£900), giving you £2,400 going into your pension.
How to Increase Your Take Home Pay on £30,000
- Check your tax code — if it’s not 1257L, you may be overpaying. See the Tax Code Guide
- Claim Marriage Allowance — save £252/year if your partner earns under £12,570. See the Marriage Allowance Guide
- Use salary sacrifice — pension, cycle to work, and EV schemes reduce tax. See the Salary Sacrifice Guide
- Claim uniform or WFH relief — could save £50–250/year. See the Working From Home Tax Relief Guide
What Jobs Pay £30,000?
£30,000 represents a mid-career salary for roles across a wide range of sectors. It’s common for experienced admin and support roles, qualified trades workers, and early-career professionals.
| Job / role | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Experienced school teacher (main scale) | £29,000–£38,000 | England and Wales, not London |
| Police constable (response) | £28,000–£34,000 | After probation |
| Staff nurse (Band 5) | £28,407–£34,581 | NHS Agenda for Change |
| Electrician (qualified) | £28,000–£36,000 | Employed, not self-employed |
| HR advisor | £28,000–£35,000 | Mid-level HR in most sectors |
| Office manager | £28,000–£35,000 | Small-medium businesses |
| Marketing executive | £26,000–£33,000 | Mid-level, outside London |
| Senior call centre agent | £27,000–£32,000 | Team leader or specialist role |
Living on £30,000 — The Reality
With £2,045 per month take-home (no student loan), £30,000 provides a comfortable lifestyle in most parts of the UK — with careful budgeting. The key dividing line is housing cost.
Outside London: You can rent a one-bedroom flat in most UK cities for £500–£800/month, leaving £1,200–£1,500 for everything else. Living alone on £30,000 is genuinely achievable in cities like Leeds, Manchester, Birmingham, Glasgow, and Cardiff. You should be able to save £200–£400/month.
London: A one-bedroom flat in Zone 2–4 costs £1,400–£1,800/month minimum. On £2,045 take-home, you’d have £245–£645 left for all other expenses. Flat-sharing is almost essential; a room in a shared house (£700–£1,000) is far more manageable.
First-Time Buyer Potential on £30,000
On a sole application, lenders typically offer 4–4.5x salary:
| Multiple | Borrowing potential | Property value (10% deposit) |
|---|---|---|
| 4x | £120,000 | ~£133,000 |
| 4.5x | £135,000 | ~£150,000 |
A £133,000–£150,000 property is achievable in many areas outside London and the South East, including much of the North, Midlands, Wales, and Northern Ireland. The Help to Buy ISA replacement — the Lifetime ISA — can add up to £1,000/year in government bonuses to your deposit savings. On £30,000, saving £200–£300/month would get you a 10% deposit on a £133,000 property in around four years.
Building Savings on £30,000
| Priority | Monthly | Annual | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Emergency fund first | £150–£250 | £1,800–£3,000 | Build 3 months’ expenses |
| Pension top-up (beyond auto-enrolment) | £50–£100 + employer | — | Basic tax relief on contributions |
| Lifetime ISA (first home/retirement) | Up to £333 | £4,000 (+ £1,000 bonus) | Under 40 only |
| Cash ISA or easy-access savings | Remainder | — | For medium-term goals |
Why £30,000 Is a Pivotal Salary
£30,000 is often where people first start being able to save meaningfully while covering living costs. The jump from £25,000 to £30,000 adds approximately £350/month in take-home pay — enough to begin building an emergency fund seriously and start thinking about a house deposit.
However, £30,000 is also where the north/south divide in the UK starts to bite hardest. In London, £30,000 is a survival salary. In Leeds, Sheffield, or Swansea, it’s a comfortable one. When evaluating a job offer at £30,000, always factor in local housing costs — a £30,000 job in Manchester with £650/month rent is worth more in real terms than a £35,000 job in London with £1,600/month rent.