Contractor Day Rate Take-Home Pay 2026/27 — Ltd vs Umbrella vs PAYE

£200/Day Contractor Take-Home Pay 2026/27 — Ltd vs Umbrella vs PAYE

How much you take home on £200 a day as a UK contractor in 2026/27. Full breakdown for limited company, umbrella, and PAYE — with monthly figures and worked example.

Self-employment tax and business information is based on current HMRC rules. This is not tax or accounting advice. Consider consulting a qualified accountant for your specific circumstances.

On £200/day (220 days, £44,000/year revenue), a limited company contractor takes home £2,732/month. Umbrella produces £2,550/month. The £182/month gap — £2,184/year — comfortably exceeds typical accountancy costs, making Ltd the financially stronger choice at this rate.

Take-Home Comparison — £200/Day

Ltd CompanyUmbrellaPAYE
Annual revenue£44,000£44,000£44,000
Gross personal income£12,570 salary + £22,108 dividends£37,609 salary£38,913 salary
Income tax£0 salary; £1,891 dividend tax£5,008£5,269
National Insurance£0 (employee)£2,003£2,107
Monthly take-home£2,732£2,550£2,628
Annual take-home£32,787£30,598£31,537

Ltd Company Calculation (Outside IR35)

Annual revenue: £44,000

  • Director salary: −£12,570
  • Employer NI (15% above £5,000): −£1,136
  • Ltd expenses: −£3,000
  • Taxable profit: £27,294

Corporation tax (19%): £5,186 Profit after CT: £22,108

Dividends:

  • First £500 at 0% = £0
  • Remaining £21,608 at 8.75% = £1,891
  • Net dividends: £20,217

Take-home: £12,570 + £20,217 = £32,787/year = £2,732/month

Umbrella Company Calculation (Inside IR35)

Revenue after umbrella margin: £42,500 Gross salary: (£42,500 + £750) ÷ 1.15 = £37,609

DeductionAmount
Income tax (20% above £12,570)£5,008
Employee NI (8% above £12,570)£2,003
Net take-home£30,598/year = £2,550/month

PAYE Calculation

Gross salary: (£44,000 + £750) ÷ 1.15 = £38,913

  • Income tax: £5,269
  • Employee NI: £2,107
  • Take-home: £31,537/year = £2,628/month

Is Ltd Worth It at £200/Day?

Annual take-home gain: £2,189 (Ltd vs umbrella)

With accountancy at ~£1,000/year, you’re £1,189/year ahead through Ltd — and that gap grows every year. At £200/day, running a limited company makes financial sense for anyone contracting for 6+ months of the year.

The key questions to ask:

  • Is your contract outside IR35? (Essential for the dividend model)
  • Do you have a fixed-cost accountant? (Look for £800–£1,200/year flat-fee packages)
  • Are you likely to be contracting for 2+ years? (Setup costs amortise quickly)

Worked Example — Sara, Mid-Level Developer Contractor

Sara is a mid-level web developer contracting at £200/day through her limited company, outside IR35. Annual revenue: £44,000.

Company financial year:

  • Revenue: £44,000
  • Salary cost (incl. employer NI): £13,706
  • Expenses: £3,000
  • Profit: £27,294
  • CT (19%): £5,186
  • Retained for dividends: £22,108

Sara’s personal income:

  • Salary: £12,570 (no income tax, no employee NI)
  • Dividends: £22,108 gross; tax: £1,891
  • Monthly take-home: £2,732

Her umbrella-using peer on the same rate takes home £2,550/month. Sara is £2,184/year ahead, paying £1,100/year to her accountant — net benefit: £1,084/year, plus she builds retained profit for future flexibility.

£200/Day in Context — Is It a Good Rate?

£200/day (£44,000 annual revenue on 220 days) sits in the lower-mid range of UK contractor day rates. As of 2026:

Day rateMarket context
Under £150/dayEntry-level IT support, junior admin roles
£150–£250/dayMid-level technical and professional roles
£250–£400/daySenior specialists, experienced developers, finance consultants
£400–£600/dayPrincipal/architect level, specialist niches
£600+/dayExecutive, rare skillsets, financial services

At £200/day the annual revenue (£44,000) is close to the UK median full-time salary — but contractor take-home is typically higher due to the Ltd dividend model, and you have no employer pension, sick pay, or holiday pay built in. Factor those costs into your rate when comparing to permanent offers.

Expenses at £200/Day

One advantage of the Ltd company structure (outside IR35) is the ability to claim legitimate business expenses tax-free:

ExpenseAllowed?
Home office (use-of-home allowance or apportioned costs)Yes
Travel to client sites (not same site every day)Yes
Professional subscriptionsYes
Training and professional developmentYes
Accountancy feesYes
Equipment (laptops, peripherals)Yes (capital allowances)
Business mobile phoneYes (if company-owned)
Client entertainmentNo (not deductible for CT)

At £200/day, the ability to run legitimate expenses through the company adds meaningful value — a contractor spending £3,000/year on home office, equipment, and subscriptions saves £570 in Corporation Tax (19% on £3,000) vs taking it as salary.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Off-payroll working (IR35)
  2. HMRC — Corporation Tax rates