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

How Much Tax Do I Pay on a £85,000 Salary in 2026/27?

On a £85,000 salary in 2026/27 you pay £21,432 income tax and £3,711 NI. Take-home is £59,857. Child Benefit is fully gone — and the £100k trap is only £15k away.

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 £85,000, Child Benefit has already been 100% clawed back — and the £100,000 Personal Allowance trap is only £15,000 away. In 2026/27 you pay £21,432 in Income Tax and £3,711 in National Insurance, keeping £59,857. Here is the full calculation, what you have lost to the HICBC, how to get some of it back, and how to protect yourself from the 60% marginal rate that starts at £100,000.

Tax on £85,000 Salary: Quick Summary

AnnualMonthlyWeekly
Gross salary£85,000£7,083.33£1,634.62
Income Tax£21,432£1,786.00£412.15
National Insurance£3,711£309.25£71.37
Take-home pay£59,857£4,988£1,151.27

Effective tax rate: 29.6% — you keep 70.4p of every £1 earned. Marginal rate: 42% — what you pay on your next pound (40% IT + 2% NI).

How Income Tax Is Calculated on £85,000

2026/27 Income Tax Bands

BandIncome rangeTax rate
Personal AllowanceUp to £12,5700%
Basic rate£12,571 – £50,27020%
Higher rate£50,271 – £125,14040%
Additional rateAbove £125,14045%

Step-by-Step Calculation

StepCalculationResult
Gross salary£85,000
Minus Personal Allowance−£12,570£72,430 taxable
Basic rate tax (20%)£37,700 × 20%£7,540
Higher rate tax (40%)£34,730 × 40%£13,892
Total Income Tax£21,432

National Insurance on £85,000

Earnings bandRateYour earnings in this bandNI owed
Up to £12,5700%£12,570£0
£12,571 – £50,2708%£37,700£3,016
£50,271 – £85,0002%£34,730£695
Total NI£3,711

Full Take-Home Pay Breakdown

AnnualMonthlyWeekly
Gross salary£85,000£7,083.33£1,634.62
Income Tax−£21,432−£1,786.00−£412.15
National Insurance−£3,711−£309.25−£71.37
Take-home pay£59,857£4,988£1,151.27

The High Income Child Benefit Charge at £85,000

The HICBC reached 100% clawback at £80,000. At £85,000, your Child Benefit is entirely repaid via Self Assessment regardless of how many children you have. You receive nothing from Child Benefit in net terms.

What You Are Losing

ChildrenAnnual Child BenefitAmount clawed back (100%)Net benefit
1 child~£1,354−£1,354£0
2 children~£2,254−£2,254£0
3 children~£3,094−£3,094£0

Many families in this position simply stop claiming Child Benefit to avoid the Self Assessment administration. However, claiming and repaying still protects the primary carer’s State Pension NI record — it is worth claiming for this reason alone even if the net cash benefit is zero.

Recovering Child Benefit with a Pension

To begin recovering Child Benefit, your adjusted net income needs to fall below £80,000.

Target adjusted net incomeRequired pension contributionChild Benefit recovered (2 children)IT/NI savedNet cost of contribution
£80,000 (HICBC still 100%)£5,000£0£2,100£2,900
£75,000 (75% clawback)£10,000£564£4,200£5,236
£65,000 (25% clawback)£20,000£1,691£8,400£9,909
£60,000 (0% clawback)£25,000£2,254£10,500£12,246

A £25,000 contribution to eliminate the HICBC entirely saves £10,500 in tax/NI and recovers £2,254 in Child Benefit — total benefit £12,754. Net cost in take-home: £12,246. The £25,000 goes into your pension, so your total wealth position improves.

See our HICBC guide and how to avoid the HICBC.

The £100,000 Trap: You Are £15,000 Away

This is the single most important planning point at £85,000. Once adjusted net income exceeds £100,000, the Personal Allowance tapers at £1 per £2 above £100,000. The effective marginal rate jumps to 60%.

Adjusted net incomeAllowance lostExtra tax on that incomeEffective marginal rate
£100,000–£100,999£0–£49940% on the income40%
£101,000£500£200 extra60%
£110,000£5,000£2,000 extra60%
£125,140£12,570 (all gone)£5,028 extra60%

On an £85,000 base salary, you can receive up to £14,999 in additional income (bonus, rental, interest, dividends) before hitting this trap. Anything beyond that is taxed at 60%.

Salary Sacrifice to Protect Against the Trap

If a bonus or pay rise risks taking your total above £100,000, salary sacrificing the amount above £85,000 into a pension keeps adjusted net income below the taper threshold and saves 42p per pound instead of losing 60p.

Example: £85,000 salary + £20,000 bonus = £105,000 total

Without salary sacrifice: the £15,001–£20,000 portion (£4,999) is taxed at 60% effective rate = extra £2,000 tax versus a standard 42% rate.

With a £20,000 pension sacrifice: adjusted net income = £85,000, 60% rate avoided, total pension benefit = £8,400 tax/NI saving.

See our £100,000 salary tax guide.

Pension Contributions at £85,000

All contributions fall entirely in the higher rate band (40% IT + 2% NI):

Gross pension contributionIT savedNI savedTotal savedNet cost
£5,000£2,000£100£2,100£2,900
£10,000£4,000£200£4,200£5,800
£15,000 (buffer below £100k)£6,000£300£6,300£8,700
£25,000 (to HICBC threshold)£10,000£500£10,500£14,500
£34,730 (to basic rate)£13,892£695£14,587£20,143

See our Pension Tax Relief Guide and Salary Sacrifice Guide.

What If You Earn a Bonus?

A bonus on £85,000 is taxed at 42% until income reaches £100,000 — at which point the 60% effective rate kicks in. Plan all bonuses with this threshold in mind.

Example: £85,000 + £10,000 bonus = £95,000

The full bonus falls in the higher rate band: £4,000 Income Tax + £200 NI = £4,200 deducted. You keep £5,800 of the £10,000 bonus.

Example: £85,000 + £20,000 bonus = £105,000

£15,000 at 42% = £6,300 in tax/NI, then £5,000 triggers PA taper: additional £2,000 extra tax. Total deductions: £8,300. You keep £11,700 of the £20,000 bonus — but at a blended rate well above 40%.

See our Tax on Bonuses Guide.

How £85,000 Compares to UK Salaries

Annual salary
UK median full-time salary (2025)£35,000
Higher rate threshold£50,270
HICBC 100% clawback£80,000
Your salary£85,000
Personal Allowance taper begins£100,000

A £85,000 salary places you in approximately the top 5–7% of UK full-time earners.

If You Have a Student Loan

Loan planThresholdRateAnnual repayment on £85k
Plan 1£24,9909%£5,401
Plan 2£27,2959%£5,194
Plan 4 (Scotland)£31,3959%£4,824
Plan 5£25,0009%£5,400
Postgraduate£21,0006%£3,840

With a Plan 2 student loan, total deductions reach £30,337 and take-home falls to approximately £54,663 per year (£4,555/month).

Monthly Budget on £4,988 Take-Home

ExpenseEstimated monthly cost
Rent / mortgage£1,000–£2,000
Food and groceries£350–£550
Transport£150–£400
Utilities and bills£150–£300
Pension contributionsRecommended to protect against £100k trap
Entertainment and leisure£300–£500
Savings / investments£500–£1,000

Sources

  1. HMRC — Income Tax rates and Personal Allowances
  2. HMRC — High Income Child Benefit Tax Charge
  3. HMRC — National Insurance rates