Scotland sets its own income tax rates, which differ from the rest of the UK. If your tax code starts with ‘S’, you’re on Scottish rates. Here’s exactly how it affects your take home pay at every salary level in 2026/27.
Scottish vs English Tax Rates 2026/27
| Band | Scotland | Rate | England/Wales/NI | Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | Up to £12,570 | 0% | Up to £12,570 | 0% |
| Starter rate | £12,571–£14,876 | 19% | — | — |
| Basic rate | £14,877–£25,628 | 20% | £12,571–£50,270 | 20% |
| Intermediate rate | £25,629–£43,663 | 21% | — | — |
| Higher rate | £43,664–£75,000 | 42% | £50,271–£125,140 | 40% |
| Advanced rate | £75,001–£125,140 | 45% | — | — |
| Top rate | Over £125,140 | 48% | Over £125,140 | 45% |
Scotland has six tax bands compared to three in the rest of the UK. The key differences:
- Scotland has a 19% starter rate on the first £2,306 of taxable income (saving you money)
- Scotland’s higher rate starts earlier at £43,663 vs £50,270 (costing you money)
- Scotland’s higher rate is 42% vs 40% (costing you more)
- Scotland has an advanced rate of 45% from £75,000–£125,140
- Scotland’s top rate is 48% vs 45%
Take Home Pay Comparison at Every Salary Level
| Salary | Take home (England) | Take home (Scotland) | Annual difference | Monthly difference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £20,000 | £17,836 | £17,855 | +£19 Scotland | +£2 |
| £25,000 | £21,410 | £21,543 | +£133 Scotland | +£11 |
| £30,000 | £25,120 | £25,100 | -£20 Scotland | -£2 |
| £35,000 | £28,720 | £28,650 | -£70 Scotland | -£6 |
| £40,000 | £32,320 | £32,200 | -£120 Scotland | -£10 |
| £45,000 | £35,920 | £35,469 | -£451 Scotland | -£38 |
| £50,000 | £39,520 | £37,969 | -£1,551 Scotland | -£129 |
| £60,000 | £47,374 | £43,552 | -£3,822 Scotland | -£319 |
| £70,000 | £51,157 | £49,152 | -£2,005 Scotland | -£167 |
| £80,000 | £56,957 | £54,752 | -£2,205 Scotland | -£184 |
| £100,000 | £68,557 | £65,275 | -£3,282 Scotland | -£274 |
| £125,140 | £79,457 | £74,924 | -£4,533 Scotland | -£378 |
| £150,000 | £92,457 | £86,724 | -£5,733 Scotland | -£478 |
The Crossover Point
Below approximately £27,850, you pay slightly less tax in Scotland. Above this figure, you pay more — and the gap widens significantly at higher salaries.
Worked Example: £45,000 Salary
This salary illustrates the difference most clearly, as it’s where Scotland’s higher rate band begins:
England Tax on £45,000
| Band | Amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Basic rate | £32,430 | 20% | £6,486 |
| Total | £6,486 |
Scotland Tax on £45,000
| Band | Amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Starter rate | £2,306 | 19% | £438 |
| Basic rate | £10,752 | 20% | £2,150 |
| Intermediate rate | £18,035 | 21% | £3,787 |
| Higher rate | £1,337 | 42% | £562 |
| Total | £6,937 |
Difference: £451 more tax in Scotland (£38/month)
The key driver is that £1,337 of income is taxed at Scotland’s 42% higher rate, whereas in England the entire £32,430 above the Personal Allowance would be at 20%.
How Scottish Tax Codes Work
| Code | Meaning |
|---|---|
| S1257L | Standard Scottish code with full Personal Allowance |
| S1100L | Reduced Personal Allowance (e.g., company benefits) |
| SBR | All income taxed at Scottish basic rate |
| SD0 | All income taxed at Scottish intermediate rate |
| SD1 | All income taxed at Scottish higher rate |
| SD2 | All income taxed at Scottish advanced rate |
| SD3 | All income taxed at Scottish top rate |
If you move between Scotland and the rest of the UK during the tax year, your tax status is based on where you live on 6 April. You can’t split the year.
Welsh Income Tax
Wales also has devolved income tax, but currently sets the same rates as England. Welsh tax codes begin with ‘C’ (e.g., C1257L). If Wales changes its rates in future, the impact would work similarly to Scotland.
Does Scotland Affect National Insurance?
No. National Insurance is a UK-wide system and is identical regardless of where you live:
| NI component | Rate | Same across UK? |
|---|---|---|
| Employee NI (£12,570–£50,270) | 8% | Yes |
| Employee NI (above £50,270) | 2% | Yes |
| Employer NI (above £5,000) | 13.8% | Yes |
Strategies for Scottish Higher Rate Taxpayers
If you earn above £43,663 in Scotland, you’re already a higher rate taxpayer. Tax planning strategies become valuable earlier:
- Pension contributions get relief at 42% (or 45% above £75,000) through salary sacrifice
- Marriage Allowance is only available if you earn under the basic rate threshold (£43,663 in practice for Scotland vs £50,270 in England)
- Salary sacrifice saves both income tax and NI — the higher your marginal rate, the more you save