A £75,000 salary means three-quarters of your Child Benefit is being clawed back by the High Income Child Benefit Charge — and you have £24,730 taxed at 40%. In 2026/27 you pay £17,432 in Income Tax and £3,511 in National Insurance, keeping £54,057. Here is the full calculation, what the HICBC is costing your family, and how pension contributions can recover most of it.
Tax on £75,000 Salary: Quick Summary
| Annual | Monthly | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £75,000 | £6,250.00 | £1,442.31 |
| Income Tax | £17,432 | £1,452.67 | £335.23 |
| National Insurance | £3,511 | £292.58 | £67.52 |
| Take-home pay | £54,057 | £4,505 | £1,039.56 |
Effective tax rate: 27.9% — you keep 72.1p of every £1 earned. Marginal rate: 42% — what you pay on your next pound (40% IT + 2% NI).
How Income Tax Is Calculated on £75,000
2026/27 Income Tax Bands
| Band | Income range | Tax rate |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | Up to £12,570 | 0% |
| Basic rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% |
| Higher rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% |
| Additional rate | Above £125,140 | 45% |
Step-by-Step Calculation
| Step | Calculation | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £75,000 | |
| Minus Personal Allowance | −£12,570 | £62,430 taxable |
| Basic rate tax (20%) | £37,700 × 20% | £7,540 |
| Higher rate tax (40%) | £24,730 × 40% | £9,892 |
| Total Income Tax | £17,432 |
National Insurance on £75,000
| Earnings band | Rate | Your earnings in this band | NI owed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to £12,570 | 0% | £12,570 | £0 |
| £12,571 – £50,270 | 8% | £37,700 | £3,016 |
| £50,271 – £75,000 | 2% | £24,730 | £495 |
| Total NI | £3,511 |
Full Take-Home Pay Breakdown
| Annual | Monthly | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £75,000 | £6,250.00 | £1,442.31 |
| Income Tax | −£17,432 | −£1,452.67 | −£335.23 |
| National Insurance | −£3,511 | −£292.58 | −£67.52 |
| Take-home pay | £54,057 | £4,505 | £1,039.56 |
The High Income Child Benefit Charge at £75,000
At £75,000, the HICBC claws back 75% of your Child Benefit. You are three-quarters of the way through the clawback band — only £5,000 away from the £80,000 point where 100% is repaid and Child Benefit effectively becomes worthless without a pension contribution.
How the 75% Clawback Is Calculated
The HICBC charges 1% per £200 above £60,000.
At £75,000: excess = £15,000 → £15,000 ÷ £200 = 75 percentage points → 75% repaid.
What You Lose at £75,000
| Children | Annual Child Benefit | HICBC at £75,000 (75%) | Net Child Benefit kept |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 child | ~£1,354 | −£1,016 | £338 |
| 2 children | ~£2,254 | −£1,691 | £563 |
| 3 children | ~£3,094 | −£2,321 | £773 |
2026/27 Child Benefit: £26.05/week eldest child (£1,354/year), £17.25/week each additional (£897/year).
You are keeping just 25p of every £1 of Child Benefit.
Restoring Child Benefit with a Pension Contribution
A salary sacrifice contribution of £15,000 reduces adjusted net income from £75,000 to £60,000 — the HICBC threshold. Child Benefit is fully restored.
Worked example: two children (£2,254 Child Benefit/year)
| No pension | £15,000 pension sacrifice | |
|---|---|---|
| Gross pay | £75,000 | £60,000 |
| Income Tax | £17,432 | £9,432 |
| NI | £3,511 | £3,016 |
| HICBC | −£1,691 | £0 |
| Take-home | £52,366 | £47,552 |
| Pension contribution | £0 | £15,000 |
| Total wealth (take-home + pension) | £52,366 | £62,552 |
The £15,000 pension contribution saves £8,000 in Income Tax and £495 in NI, and recovers £1,691 in Child Benefit. Total benefit: £10,186. Net cost in take-home: £4,814.
The government and HICBC system effectively fund 67% of this pension contribution.
See the HICBC guide and how to avoid the High Income Child Benefit Charge.
Pension Contributions: What You Save
| Gross pension contribution | IT saved | NI saved | HICBC recovered (2 children) | Total benefit | Net cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| £3,000 | £1,200 | £60 | — | £1,260 | £1,740 |
| £5,000 | £2,000 | £100 | — | £2,100 | £2,900 |
| £10,000 | £4,000 | £200 | £846 | £5,046 | £4,954 |
| £15,000 (to HICBC threshold) | £6,000 | £295 | £1,691 | £7,986 | £7,014 |
| £24,730 (to basic rate) | £9,892 | £495 | £1,691 | £12,078 | £12,652 |
HICBC recovered figures assume two children. Without children, remove the HICBC recovery column.
See our Pension Tax Relief Guide and Salary Sacrifice Guide.
What About a Pay Rise to £80,000?
At £80,000, the HICBC reaches 100% — meaning Child Benefit is entirely clawed back. A pay rise from £75,000 to £80,000 is worth examining carefully:
- The extra £5,000 gross earns 42% in tax and NI deductions: net gain = £2,900
- If you have two children, HICBC rises from 75% to 100%: extra clawback of £563
- Net gain from a £5,000 pay rise with two children: approximately £2,337
- Effective marginal rate: 53.3%
Contributing that £5,000 into a pension instead protects Child Benefit and retains the full £5,000 for retirement.
See our £80,000 salary tax article.
What If You Earn a Bonus?
A bonus on top of £75,000 is taxed at 42% and increases HICBC clawback. Each £200 extra costs 1% more Child Benefit. At £75,000 you are close to the 100% ceiling — a £5,000 bonus takes you there.
Example: £75,000 + £5,000 bonus = £80,000
All Child Benefit is then 100% clawed back. The bonus of £5,000 costs £2,100 in tax/NI and adds £563 in HICBC for two children — keeping only £2,337 of £5,000.
See our Tax on Bonuses Guide.
How £75,000 Compares to UK Salaries
| Annual salary | |
|---|---|
| UK median full-time salary (2025) | £35,000 |
| Higher rate threshold | £50,270 |
| HICBC threshold | £60,000 |
| Your salary | £75,000 |
| HICBC 100% clawback | £80,000 |
| Personal Allowance taper | £100,000 |
A £75,000 salary places you in the top 8–10% of UK full-time earners.
If You Have a Student Loan
| Loan plan | Threshold | Rate | Annual repayment on £75k |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plan 1 | £24,990 | 9% | £4,501 |
| Plan 2 | £27,295 | 9% | £4,294 |
| Plan 4 (Scotland) | £31,395 | 9% | £3,924 |
| Plan 5 | £25,000 | 9% | £4,500 |
| Postgraduate | £21,000 | 6% | £3,240 |
With a Plan 2 student loan, total deductions reach £25,237 and take-home falls to approximately £49,763 per year (£4,147/month).
Monthly Budget on £4,505 Take-Home
| Expense | Estimated monthly cost |
|---|---|
| Rent / mortgage | £1,000–£1,800 |
| Food and groceries | £300–£500 |
| Transport | £150–£350 |
| Utilities and bills | £150–£250 |
| Pension contributions | £1,000–£1,500 recommended |
| Entertainment and leisure | £250–£400 |
| Savings / investments | £400–£800 |
At £4,505/month, a pension contribution of £1,250/month (£15,000/year via salary sacrifice) to drop to the HICBC threshold leaves take-home of approximately £3,960/month — still a comfortable salary.
Related Guides
- Income Tax UK: Tax Codes, Allowances, PAYE, Scottish Rates and Reliefs
- How Much Tax on a £70,000 Salary? — HICBC at the 50% point
- How Much Tax on a £80,000 Salary? — HICBC 100% ceiling
- High Income Child Benefit Charge Guide — full HICBC explainer
- How to Avoid the HICBC — pension strategies
- Pension Tax Relief Guide — 40% relief explained
- Salary Sacrifice Guide — reduce gross pay before tax
- Tax on Bonuses UK — higher rate bonus taxation