UK Salary Benchmarks & Comparisons

Is £90,000 a Good Salary in the UK? 2026 Guide

Is £90,000 a good salary in the UK? It puts you in the top 2% of earners with take-home pay of £5,230/month. Full 2026/27 guide including the £100k trap.

Salary and income data is based on ONS and other official UK statistical sources. Figures are averages and may not reflect your individual circumstances.

£90,000 puts you in the top 2% of UK full-time earners — a salary more than double the national median. It is an income level that gives you genuine financial freedom in most of the UK. At the same time, you are just £10,000 from the most aggressive tax trap in the UK system: the £100,000 Personal Allowance withdrawal.

See our average salary UK guide for full context and take-home pay on £90,000 for the complete tax breakdown.

Where £90,000 Ranks in the UK

MeasureValue£90,000 comparison
UK median full-time salary (ONS 2024)~£37,430140% above — nearly 2.5× the median
UK mean full-time salary~£42,500112% above mean
Top 2% threshold (approx.)~£85,000+Inside top 2%
London median full-time salary~£43,000109% above London median
Approximate UK percentile (full-time)Top 1.5–2%Exceptional earner

Your Take-Home Pay on £90,000 (2026/27)

ComponentAnnualMonthly
Gross salary£90,000£7,500
Income tax−£23,432−£1,953
National Insurance−£3,811−£318
Take-home pay£62,757£5,230

Effective income tax rate: 26.0%. Combined tax and NI rate: 30.3%.

The £10,000 above £80,000 costs you just £5,620 in tax (£4,000 income tax at 40% + £200 NI at 2%) — a marginal rate of 56.2% when expressed as a percentage of the increment. Compared to the 60%+ you would face in the taper zone above £100,000, you are still in the more favourable zone.

For the full breakdown by tax band, see our £90,000 take-home pay guide.

The £100,000 Warning: Only £10,000 Away

At £90,000, the Personal Allowance taper is imminent. The trap starts the moment adjusted net income exceeds £100,000.

IncomeEffective marginal rateWhy
Up to £100,00042%40% higher rate + 2% NI
£100,001–£125,14060%40% IT + PA taper effect + 2% NI

A bonus or pay rise of just £10,001 triggers the taper. Every pension contribution you make reduces your adjusted net income, which is why pension planning at this salary is especially important.

  • £5,000 pension contribution at £90,000 (assuming income could rise to £95k): costs £3,000 in take home, saves £5,000 in pension, gets 40% tax relief
  • £10,000 pension contribution: costs £6,000 in take home, adds £10,000 to pension

See our What Happens If I Earn Over £100,000 guide.

What Can You Afford on £90,000?

Monthly Budget: Outside London (take-home £5,230)

ExpenseMonthly estimate
Mortgage/rent (3–4 bed house)£900–£1,500
Council tax£150–£250
Utilities and broadband£150–£230
Food and groceries£300–£500
Transport£150–£350
Subscriptions and misc£100–£200
Total essentials£1,750–£3,030
Remaining for savings/leisure£2,200–£3,480

Outside London, £90,000 is an income level where financial stress is rare if spending is managed. Substantial pension contributions, ISA maximisation, and property accumulation are all achievable simultaneously.

Monthly Budget: London (take-home £5,230)

ExpenseMonthly estimate
Rent (2-bed Zone 2–3)£2,200–£2,800
Council tax£130–£200
Utilities and broadband£120–£200
Food and groceries£400–£600
Transport (Zones 1–3)£200–£270
Subscriptions and misc£100–£200
Total essentials£3,150–£4,270
Remaining£960–£2,080

In London, £90,000 is comfortable but there is limited surplus for savings at typical London rent levels. Homeownership in London requires a very large deposit or compromise on location/size.

Jobs That Pay £90,000

RoleSector
NHS Consultant (England, mid-to-senior scale)NHS
Principal software engineerTechnology
Vice president / director (investment banking, junior)Finance
Headteacher (large secondary school)Education
Barrister (established junior) / senior solicitorLegal
Senior civil servant (Grade 6 senior / Grade 5)Public sector

See our £85,000 good salary guide, £95,000 good salary guide, and £90,000 take-home pay guide.

Salary Tools and Guides

Sources

  1. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2024
  2. HMRC — Income Tax rates and Personal Allowances