UK Tax Brackets 2026/27 — Income Tax Rates Quick Reference
Complete UK income tax brackets for 2026/27 tax year. England, Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland rates, plus worked examples showing how much tax you'll pay at each salary level.
·4 min read
The 2026/27 tax year runs from 6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027. Here are all the income tax brackets you need to know.
England, Wales & Northern Ireland — Tax Brackets 2026/27
Tax Band
Taxable Income
Tax Rate
Personal Allowance
£0 – £12,570
0%
Basic Rate
£12,571 – £50,270
20%
Higher Rate
£50,271 – £125,140
40%
Additional Rate
Over £125,140
45%
Scotland — Tax Brackets 2026/27
Scotland sets its own income tax rates on earned income (employment, self-employment, pensions). Scottish residents pay:
Tax Band
Taxable Income
Tax Rate
Personal Allowance
£0 – £12,570
0%
Starter Rate
£12,571 – £14,876
19%
Basic Rate
£14,877 – £26,561
20%
Intermediate Rate
£26,562 – £43,662
21%
Higher Rate
£43,663 – £75,000
42%
Advanced Rate
£75,001 – £125,140
45%
Top Rate
Over £125,140
48%
Note: Scottish income tax only applies to earnings (salary, self-employment, pension income). Savings interest and dividends are taxed at UK rates.
Tax by Salary — Quick Lookup (England/Wales/NI)
Gross Salary
Income Tax
NI
Total Deductions
Take-Home
£15,000
£486
£194
£680
£14,320
£20,000
£1,486
£594
£2,080
£17,920
£25,000
£2,486
£994
£3,480
£21,520
£30,000
£3,486
£1,394
£4,880
£25,120
£35,000
£4,486
£1,794
£6,280
£28,720
£40,000
£5,486
£2,194
£7,680
£32,320
£45,000
£6,486
£2,594
£9,080
£35,920
£50,000
£7,486
£2,994
£10,480
£39,520
£55,000
£9,432
£3,111
£12,543
£42,457
£60,000
£11,432
£3,211
£14,643
£45,357
£70,000
£15,432
£3,411
£18,843
£51,157
£80,000
£19,432
£3,611
£23,043
£56,957
£100,000
£27,432
£4,011
£31,443
£68,557
£125,000
£42,518
£4,511
£47,029
£77,971
£150,000
£53,703
£5,011
£58,714
£91,286
Tax by Salary — Quick Lookup (Scotland)
Gross Salary
Income Tax
NI
Total Deductions
Take-Home
£15,000
£462
£194
£656
£14,344
£20,000
£1,462
£594
£2,056
£17,944
£25,000
£2,490
£994
£3,484
£21,516
£30,000
£3,636
£1,394
£5,030
£24,970
£35,000
£4,836
£1,794
£6,630
£28,370
£40,000
£6,036
£2,194
£8,230
£31,770
£45,000
£7,320
£2,594
£9,914
£35,086
£50,000
£9,420
£2,994
£12,414
£37,586
£55,000
£11,520
£3,111
£14,631
£40,369
£60,000
£13,620
£3,211
£16,831
£43,169
£70,000
£17,820
£3,411
£21,231
£48,769
£80,000
£22,320
£3,611
£25,931
£54,069
£100,000
£32,320
£4,011
£36,331
£63,669
How Tax Is Calculated
Income tax is charged on taxable income — your earnings after deducting your Personal Allowance.
Example: £45,000 Salary (England)
Step
Calculation
Gross income
£45,000
Minus Personal Allowance
£45,000 - £12,570 = £32,430
Tax at 20% on £32,430
£32,430 × 20% = £6,486
Example: £75,000 Salary (England)
Step
Calculation
Gross income
£75,000
Minus Personal Allowance
£75,000 - £12,570 = £62,430 taxable
Basic rate band
£50,270 - £12,570 = £37,700 at 20% = £7,540
Higher rate band
£75,000 - £50,270 = £24,730 at 40% = £9,892
Total tax
£17,432
The 60% Tax Trap (£100,000 – £125,140)
Once you earn over £100,000, your Personal Allowance is gradually withdrawn:
Income
Personal Allowance
Effective Rate in Band
Up to £100,000
£12,570
40%
£100,001 – £125,140
Reduces by £1 per £2
60%
Over £125,140
£0
45%
How the 60% Trap Works
Extra £1,000 Earned
Lost Allowance
Extra Tax
£100,000 → £101,000
£500
£400 (40%) + £200 (lost allowance) = £600
£101,000 → £102,000
£500
£600
£124,000 → £125,000
£500
£600
£125,000 → £126,000
£0 (already gone)
£450 (45%)
How to Avoid the 60% Trap
Strategy
How It Helps
Pension contributions
Reduce adjusted net income below £100,000
Salary sacrifice
Same effect as pension
Gift Aid donations
Extend basic rate band
Spread income over tax years
Defer bonuses if possible
Personal Allowance Rules
Income Level
Personal Allowance
Up to £100,000
£12,570
£100,001 – £125,140
Gradually reduced
Over £125,140
£0
Who Gets a Different Personal Allowance?
Situation
Personal Allowance
Standard
£12,570
Born before 6 April 1948 (rare)
May be higher
Marriage Allowance transferred to spouse
£11,310 (gave away £1,260)
Marriage Allowance received from spouse
£13,830 (received £1,260)
Blind Person’s Allowance
£12,570 + £3,070 = £15,640
Dividend Tax Rates 2026/27
Dividends have their own tax rates (on top of the £500 dividend allowance):
Tax Band
Dividend Rate
Basic rate taxpayer
8.75%
Higher rate taxpayer
33.75%
Additional rate taxpayer
39.35%
Savings Interest Tax Rates 2026/27
Savings interest over your Personal Savings Allowance:
Tax Band
Savings Rate
Personal Savings Allowance
Basic rate
20%
£1,000
Higher rate
40%
£500
Additional rate
45%
£0
Capital Gains Tax Rates 2026/27
Gains above the £3,000 annual exempt amount:
Asset Type
Basic Rate
Higher/Additional Rate
Most assets
18%
24%
Residential property
18%
24%
Business assets (BADR)
10%
10%
Key Dates for 2026/27 Tax Year
Date
Event
6 April 2026
Tax year starts
31 January 2027
Self Assessment deadline (online) for 2025/26
5 April 2027
Tax year ends
31 January 2028
Self Assessment deadline for 2026/27
Changes from 2025/26
Item
2025/26
2026/27
Personal Allowance
£12,570
£12,570 (frozen)
Basic rate threshold
£37,700
£37,700 (frozen)
Higher rate threshold
£50,270
£50,270 (frozen)
Additional rate threshold
£125,140
£125,140 (frozen)
Dividend allowance
£500
£500 (unchanged)
CGT annual exempt
£3,000
£3,000 (unchanged)
The freeze on thresholds (in place since 2021) continues. With wage inflation, more people are being pushed into higher tax brackets — this is called fiscal drag.