Take-Home Pay UK: Salary Calculators, Deductions, NI and Student Loans

How Much Tax Do I Pay on a £110,000 Salary in 2026/27?

Exact tax breakdown on a £110,000 UK salary in 2026/27. Take-home pay, the personal allowance taper, and why pension contributions save you £6,000.

Tax information is based on HMRC rules for the 2026/27 tax year. Tax rules can change — always verify current rates at GOV.UK. This is not tax advice. Consider consulting a qualified tax adviser for your personal situation.

At £110,000, you are £10,000 into the most punishing stretch of the UK tax system — the personal allowance taper zone. Your marginal rate on every additional pound is 62%, and your personal allowance has already been cut by £5,000. Strategic pension planning can recover thousands.

Read more: See our Take Home Pay guide for a complete overview of this topic.

Tax on £110,000 Salary: Quick Summary

AnnualMonthlyWeekly
Gross salary£110,000£9,167£2,115
Personal allowance£7,570
Income tax£33,432£2,786£643
National Insurance£4,210.60£350.88£80.97
Take-home pay£72,357.40£6,029.78£1,391.49

Your effective tax rate on £110,000 is 34.22%.

The Personal Allowance Taper at £110,000

Your personal allowance is reduced because your income exceeds £100,000:

  • Income above £100,000: £10,000
  • Personal allowance reduction: £10,000 ÷ 2 = £5,000
  • Adjusted personal allowance: £12,570 − £5,000 = £7,570

Income Tax Calculation on £110,000

Step-by-Step

Step 1: Taxable income = £110,000 − £7,570 (adjusted PA) = £102,430

Step 2: Basic rate (20%) on £37,700 = £7,540

Step 3: Higher rate (40%) on £64,730 (£102,430 − £37,700) = £25,892

Total income tax: £33,432

Tax Bands

BandTaxable incomeRateTax
Personal Allowance£0–£7,5700%£0
Basic rate£7,571–£45,27020%£7,540
Higher rate£45,271–£102,43040%£25,892
Total£33,432

National Insurance on £110,000

BandRateTax
£0–£12,5700%£0
£12,570–£50,2708%£3,016
£50,270–£110,0002%£1,194.60
Total NI£4,210.60

Why You Should Make Pension Contributions

On £110,000, every £1 contributed to a pension saves 62p in tax and NI — the highest effective relief available in the UK tax system outside of gift aid.

Worked example — £10,000 pension contribution:

Without contributionWith £10,000 pension
Adjusted net income£110,000£100,000
Personal allowance£7,570£12,570 (fully restored)
Income tax£33,432£27,432
Tax saving£6,000
Net cost of pension contribution£4,000
Pension pot grows by£10,000

For every £4,000 you contribute after tax (via salary sacrifice), £10,000 enters your pension — an immediate 150% return on net investment.

Effect of Other Deductions

DeductionAnnual amountTake-home after deduction
No extras£72,357
5% workplace pension (£5,500)£5,500£69,157 (+ £5,500 in pension)
10% pension contribution (£11,000) — drops below taper£11,000£71,357 (+ £11,000 in pension)
Plan 2 student loan£7,444£64,913

For a deep dive into the £100k trap and avoidance strategies, see what happens when you earn over £100,000, £100k salary breakdown, and £120k salary breakdown.

Sources

  1. HMRC — Income Tax rates and Personal Allowances
  2. HMRC — National Insurance rates