A £40,000 salary puts you above the UK median and comfortably in the basic rate tax band. Here’s your complete take home pay breakdown for 2026/27.
£40,000 Salary Breakdown 2026/27
| Component | Annual | Monthly | Weekly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £40,000 | £3,333 | £769 |
| Income tax | -£5,486 | -£457 | -£106 |
| National Insurance | -£2,194 | -£183 | -£42 |
| Take home pay | £32,320 | £2,693 | £622 |
How the Tax Is Calculated
| Band | Taxable amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Basic rate | £27,430 | 20% | £5,486 |
| Total income tax | £5,486 |
National Insurance on £40,000
| Earnings band | Amount | Rate | NI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to £12,570 (Primary Threshold) | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| £12,570–£40,000 | £27,430 | 8% | £2,194 |
| Total employee NI | £2,194 |
Your employer pays an additional £4,830 in NI (13.8% on earnings above £5,000), making the total cost of employing you £44,830.
£40,000 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 | £1,351 | £1,144 | £775 | £1,350 | £1,140 |
| Take home after SL | £30,969 | £31,176 | £31,545 | £30,970 | £31,180 |
With Plan 2 plus a postgraduate loan, combined deductions are £2,284 — dropping take home to £30,036 per year (£2,503/month).
£40,000 After Tax in Scotland
| 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 | £14,372 (to £40,000) | 21% | £3,018 |
| Total Scottish income tax | £5,606 | ||
| Take home (Scotland) | £32,200 |
At £40,000, Scotland’s intermediate rate means you pay about £120 more per year than in England — roughly £10 per month difference.
What Your £40,000 Salary Means Per Hour
Based on a 37.5-hour working week:
| Measure | Gross | After tax |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly | £20.51 | £16.58 |
| Daily (7.5 hrs) | £153.85 | £124.31 |
| Weekly | £769.23 | £621.54 |
| Monthly | £3,333 | £2,693 |
Impact of Pension Contributions
With a 5% employee pension contribution via salary sacrifice:
| Without pension | With 5% pension | |
|---|---|---|
| Pension deduction | £0 | £2,000 |
| Taxable income | £40,000 | £38,000 |
| Income tax | £5,486 | £5,086 |
| NI | £2,194 | £2,034 |
| Take home | £32,320 | £30,880 |
| Pension pot (annual) | £0 | £2,000 + £1,200 employer |
You lose £1,440 in take home but gain £3,200 in pension savings. If your employer passes on NI savings from salary sacrifice, your pension contribution could be even higher.
Comparing £40,000 to Other Salaries
| Salary | Annual take home | Monthly | vs £40k |
|---|---|---|---|
| £35,000 | £28,720 | £2,393 | -£300/month |
| £40,000 | £32,320 | £2,693 | — |
| £45,000 | £35,200 | £2,933 | +£240/month |
| £50,000 | £38,080 | £3,173 | +£480/month |
How to Increase Your Take Home Pay
- Check your tax code — wrong codes are common, especially after job changes. See the Tax Code Guide
- Maximise salary sacrifice — pension, EV, cycle to work schemes save tax and NI. See the Salary Sacrifice Guide
- Claim Marriage Allowance — £252/year saving if your partner earns under £12,570. See the Marriage Allowance Guide
- Claim professional subscriptions — many industry bodies qualify for tax relief. See HMRC’s list of approved organisations
What Jobs Pay £40,000?
£40,000 is a solid above-average salary, typical for experienced professionals, team managers, and skilled technical specialists. It sits around the 55th–60th percentile of full-time UK earnings.
| Job / role | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| NHS Band 7 (specialist / team manager) | £43,742–£50,056 | Agenda for Change |
| Experienced secondary teacher (UPS) | £41,333–£43,685 | England, Upper Pay Scale entry |
| Mid-level software engineer | £36,000–£48,000 | Varies by employer and tech stack |
| Chartered accountant (newly qualified) | £38,000–£48,000 | Qualified ACA/ACCA post-training contract |
| Civil service SEO grade | £36,000–£44,000 | Senior Executive Officer band |
| Operations manager (SME) | £35,000–£45,000 | Small-medium businesses |
| Structural engineer (mid) | £38,000–£45,000 | Several years’ post-qualification |
| Head of finance (charity) | £37,000–£45,000 | Voluntary sector |
Child Benefit Considerations at £40,000
At £40,000, you are well below the High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) threshold of £60,000. If you have children and haven’t yet claimed Child Benefit, you should be receiving it — there’s no reason not to at this income level. See the Child Benefit Guide for full details on claiming.
Child Benefit in 2026/27 pays £26.05/week for the first child and £17.25/week for each additional child. On £40,000, you receive the full amount with no clawback. Don’t overlook this if you’re eligible.
Housing and Mortgage Potential on £40,000
| Multiple | Borrowing potential | Property at 10% deposit |
|---|---|---|
| 4x | £160,000 | ~£178,000 |
| 4.5x | £180,000 | ~£200,000 |
£160,000–£200,000 is achievable in many UK regions outside London and the South East. Joint borrowing with a partner also earning £40,000 gives you a combined £320,000–£360,000 — enough for a family home in most cities. See our mortgage affordability guides for specific regional breakdowns.
ISA and Savings Potential on £40,000
With roughly £2,693/month take-home (no student loan), £40,000 is a level where consistent wealth building becomes realistic:
| Goal | Monthly contribution | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Stocks & Shares ISA | £250–£500 | £3,000–£6,000/year; £20,000 annual limit |
| Emergency fund (6 months) | £200 to build | ~£13,000–£15,000 target |
| Pension top-up (beyond auto-enrolment) | £100–£300 extra | Tax relief makes this very efficient |
| LISA (if under 40, first home/retirement) | Up to £333 | 25% government bonus — use it if eligible |
At £40,000, you’re still in the basic rate band, which means pension contributions receive 20% tax relief. At £20% relief plus NI savings via salary sacrifice, every £100 pension contribution only costs around £72 from your take-home pay.
The 40k Salary in Different UK Regions
The lifestyle you get from £40,000 varies enormously by where you live. Here’s a real-terms comparison:
| Region | Local median full-time salary | How £40k compares | Housing cost (1-bed rent) |
|---|---|---|---|
| London | ~£44,000 | Slightly below local median | £1,600–£2,400/month |
| South East | ~£37,000 | 8% above median | £1,000–£1,500/month |
| South West | ~£33,000 | 21% above median | £800–£1,200/month |
| West Midlands | ~£32,000 | 25% above median | £650–£950/month |
| Yorkshire | ~£31,000 | 29% above median | £600–£850/month |
| Scotland | ~£33,000 | 21% above median | £700–£1,000/month |
| North East | ~£30,000 | 33% above median | £550–£800/month |
In the North East or Yorkshire, £40,000 represents a notably comfortable income. In London, it’s just below the local median and requires careful housing decisions.