A £90,000 salary keeps you in the higher rate tax band with a 42% marginal rate — but you are only £10,000 below the personal allowance taper that creates a 60% effective rate. Child benefit is entirely gone. Here is exactly what you take home in 2026/27, and what to watch out for.
Read more: See our Take Home Pay guide for a complete overview of how deductions work.
£90,000 Salary Breakdown 2026/27
| Component | Annual | Monthly | Weekly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £90,000 | £7,500 | £1,731 |
| Income tax | −£23,432 | −£1,953 | −£451 |
| National Insurance | −£3,811 | −£318 | −£73 |
| Take home pay | £62,757 | £5,230 | £1,207 |
How the Tax Is Calculated
| Band | Taxable amount | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Basic rate | £37,700 (£12,570–£50,270) | 20% | £7,540 |
| Higher rate | £39,730 (£50,270–£90,000) | 40% | £15,892 |
| Total income tax | £23,432 |
Your full Personal Allowance (£12,570) remains intact at £90,000. The taper that erodes it does not start until £100,000 — but you are £10,000 away.
National Insurance on £90,000
| Earnings band | Amount | Rate | NI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Up to £12,570 (Primary Threshold) | £12,570 | 0% | £0 |
| £12,570–£50,270 (main rate) | £37,700 | 8% | £3,016 |
| £50,270–£90,000 (reduced rate) | £39,730 | 2% | £795 |
| Total employee NI | £3,811 |
Your marginal rate on all earnings above £50,270 is 42% (40% income tax + 2% NI).
Effective Tax Rates on £90,000
| Measure | Rate |
|---|---|
| Marginal tax rate (above £50,270) | 42% (40% IT + 2% NI) |
| Effective income tax rate | 26.0% |
| Effective total deduction rate | 30.3% |
| Take home as % of gross | 69.7% |
The £100k Trap: Why This Salary Demands Attention
At £90,000, a bonus of just £10,000 would push your income above £100,000 and into one of the most punishing tax zones in the UK system.
From £100,000, the Personal Allowance (£12,570) is withdrawn at £1 for every £2 of income above the threshold. This means the effective marginal rate between £100,000 and £125,140 is 60%:
| Income range | Effective marginal rate | Why |
|---|---|---|
| £50,271–£100,000 | 42% | 40% IT + 2% NI |
| £100,001–£125,140 | 60% | 40% IT + 20% on lost PA × 0.5 + 2% NI |
| Above £125,140 | 47% | 45% IT + 2% NI |
What this means in practice: If you earn £110,000, you pay more in effective tax on the £100,001–£110,000 slice than on any other £10,000 slice of your salary — more even than on the highest rate income.
Pension contributions are the primary tool for managing this. If you expect a bonus that will push you over £100,000, contributing the excess to a pension preserves your full Personal Allowance. Every £2 contributed above £100,000 via pension saves £1 of Personal Allowance — worth 40% income tax on that £1.
For a full breakdown of how the taper works and how to avoid it, see our £100,000 Take Home Pay guide and Income Tax guide.
Child Benefit at £90,000: Fully Gone
The High Income Child Benefit Charge (HICBC) eliminates child benefit entirely at £80,000. On a £90,000 salary, there is no child benefit to receive — it was fully clawed back at £80,000.
| Children | Annual child benefit | Child benefit retained at £90k |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | £1,354 | £0 |
| 2 | £2,251 | £0 |
| 3 | £3,148 | £0 |
Can you get it back? Yes — by reducing your adjusted net income below £80,000 through pension contributions. A £10,000 pension contribution reduces adjusted income to £80,000, at which point partial child benefit is restored. A £30,000 contribution brings adjusted income to £60,000 and restores child benefit fully.
The combined value of pension tax relief plus restored child benefit can be very significant. Two children’s child benefit is worth £2,251/year. Recovering it, combined with the 42% tax and NI saving on the contribution itself, often makes large pension contributions extremely efficient at this income level.
£90,000 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 | £5,851 | £5,643 | £5,274 | £5,850 | £4,140 |
| Take home after SL | £56,906 | £57,114 | £57,483 | £56,907 | £58,617 |
If you have both Plan 2 and Postgraduate loans, combined deductions are £9,783/year (£815/month), bringing take home to £52,974.
£90,000 After Tax in Scotland
Scotland’s income tax rates include an Advanced rate of 45% on earnings between £75,001 and £125,140 — significantly above England’s 40% higher rate band.
| 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 | £18,034 (to £43,662) | 21% | £3,787 |
| Higher rate | £31,338 (to £75,000) | 42% | £13,162 |
| Advanced rate | £15,000 (to £90,000) | 45% | £6,750 |
| Total Scottish income tax | £26,287 | ||
| Take home (Scotland) | £59,902 |
In Scotland, you pay £2,855 more income tax per year than in England on a £90,000 salary — approximately £238 per month. The Advanced rate of 45% on the £75,001–£90,000 slice accounts for the difference exceeding that at lower salary levels.
Impact of Pension Contributions
Via salary sacrifice at 5% (£4,500):
| Without pension | With 5% pension | |
|---|---|---|
| Pension contribution | £0 | £4,500 |
| Taxable income | £90,000 | £85,500 |
| Income tax | £23,432 | £21,632 |
| NI | £3,811 | £3,721 |
| Take home | £62,757 | £60,147 |
| Pension pot (annual) | £0 | £4,500 + £2,700 employer = £7,200 |
You lose £2,610 in take home pay but gain £7,200 into your pension. Every £1,000 sacrificed costs approximately £580 in reduced net pay.
Tax Planning at £90,000
| Strategy | Annual saving / benefit |
|---|---|
| Pension contributions to stay below £100k (£10,000+) | Preserves £12,570 PA — worth ~£5,028 in tax |
| Each additional £1,000 pension contribution | ~£420 in tax and NI |
| Pension contributions to restore child benefit (needs £10k–£30k) | £1,354–£3,148/year in benefit + tax saving |
| Gift Aid donations (£2,000) | £500 higher rate relief via self-assessment |
| Salary sacrifice EV (£500/month) | Up to £2,520 in tax and NI |
The key action at £90,000: Model your expected total income for the tax year (salary + any bonus, rental income, or investment income). If there is any risk of exceeding £100,000, increase your pension contributions by the excess. The return on doing so is exceptional — preserving your Personal Allowance is worth a 60% effective return on the amount contributed.
See our £100,000 Personal Allowance Trap guide and High Income Child Benefit Charge guide.
What Your £90,000 Salary Means Per Hour
Assuming a standard 37.5-hour working week:
| Measure | Gross | After tax |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly | £46.15 | £32.18 |
| Daily (7.5 hrs) | £346.15 | £241.37 |
| Weekly | £1,731 | £1,207 |
| Monthly | £7,500 | £5,230 |
What Jobs Pay £90,000?
£90,000 places you in approximately the top 5–6% of full-time UK earners.
| Role | Typical range |
|---|---|
| NHS Consultant (England) | £99,532–£131,964 |
| Senior partner / director (professional services) | £85,000–£120,000 |
| Principal software engineer | £80,000–£110,000 |
| NHS Band 8d (director of service) | £88,168–£101,677 |
| Senior civil servant (Grade 6/7) | £80,000–£100,000 |
See our Average Salary UK guide for national earnings data and where £90,000 places you by percentile.