Worked examples
UK tax worked examples
Scenario-based examples that show how take-home pay, bonuses, pay rises, salary sacrifice, and job offers play out at real UK salary levels.
Take-home pay
GBP 50,000 with Plan 2 student loan
A worked example showing how much Plan 2 repayment drag sits inside take-home pay at a commonly compared salary level.
Take-home pay on GBP 100,000
A worked example of take-home pay at GBP 100,000, the threshold where the personal allowance taper begins and the effective marginal tax rate can exceed 60 percent.
Take-home pay on GBP 120,000
A worked example showing take-home pay deep inside the personal allowance taper zone, where effective tax rates are among the highest in the UK system.
Take-home pay on GBP 20,000
A worked example of take-home pay on GBP 20,000, showing what a salary near the UK median actually means after tax and National Insurance.
Take-home pay on GBP 25,000
A practical example of take-home pay at a salary where basic living-cost planning often matters more than headline pay.
Take-home pay on GBP 30,000
A worked example showing what GBP 30,000 actually means in take-home terms, and why this salary level is a useful planning checkpoint.
Take-home pay on GBP 35,000
A worked example showing how a mid-range salary turns into spendable pay once tax, NI, and any student loan deductions are considered.
Take-home pay on GBP 40,000
A worked example of take-home pay at GBP 40,000, a salary level where tax planning starts to matter and the gap between gross and net pay becomes a real factor in decisions.
Take-home pay on GBP 45,000
A worked example showing how a mid-range salary translates into spendable pay once standard deductions are applied.
Take-home pay on GBP 50,000
A worked example showing how take-home pay looks around one of the most commonly discussed salary levels in UK pay planning.
Take-home pay on GBP 55,000
A worked example showing take-home pay at a salary that sits just above the higher-rate threshold, where marginal deductions start to bite harder.
Take-home pay on GBP 60,000
A worked example of annual and monthly take-home pay at a salary that is well into higher-rate territory.
Take-home pay on GBP 65,000
A worked example showing take-home pay at a salary where the higher-rate band has a clear effect on spendable income and salary sacrifice planning.
Take-home pay on GBP 70,000
A worked example of take-home pay at GBP 70,000, where higher-rate tax is firmly in play and salary sacrifice, bonus planning, and job offer comparisons become especially important.
Take-home pay on GBP 80,000
A worked example of take-home pay at GBP 80,000, approaching the personal allowance taper zone where salary sacrifice and pension planning become critical.
Take-home pay on GBP 90,000
A worked example showing take-home pay at a salary approaching the personal allowance taper zone, where proactive planning becomes especially valuable.
Salary sacrifice
Salary sacrifice on £100,000
A worked example focused on personal allowance taper territory and why modelling this threshold matters.
Salary sacrifice on £30,000
A worked example showing why a £30,000 salary sacrifice decision needs to be judged on net pay change, not gross sacrifice alone.
Salary sacrifice on £50,000
A worked example around the higher-rate threshold where salary sacrifice can materially change tax outcomes.
Salary sacrifice on £70,000
A worked example showing a higher earner using sacrifice to reduce effective tax drag.
Salary sacrifice on GBP 25,000
A worked example showing how salary sacrifice affects net pay at a more modest salary level.
Salary sacrifice on GBP 35,000
A worked example showing why redirecting salary into pension often reduces take-home by less than the gross sacrifice amount.
Salary sacrifice on GBP 45,000
A worked example near a common negotiation band where pension salary exchange can still change the net picture meaningfully.
Salary sacrifice on GBP 50,000 with Plan 2
A worked example showing why salary sacrifice can reduce both tax drag and Plan 2 deduction drag at the same time.
Salary sacrifice on GBP 60,000
A worked example showing why salary sacrifice becomes a more strategic pay-planning choice once taxable pay is comfortably above mid-range salary levels.
Pay rises
Pay rise from GBP 30,000 to GBP 35,000
A worked example showing how a moderate raise changes annual and monthly take-home pay.
Pay rise from GBP 40,000 to GBP 45,000
A worked example showing why a GBP 5,000 raise feels meaningful but still smaller in monthly cash than the gross increase suggests.
Pay rise from GBP 40,000 to GBP 45,000 with Plan 2
A worked example showing why a solid raise can still feel gentler once Plan 2 student-loan deductions are included.
Pay rise from GBP 45,000 to GBP 50,000
A worked example showing how a mid-range raise changes annual and monthly take-home pay.
Pay rise from GBP 50,000 to GBP 55,000
A worked example showing how a raise lands when earnings are already in a higher band.
Bonuses
Bonus of GBP 10,000 after tax
A worked example showing why a GBP 10,000 bonus can look generous in gross terms but much less dramatic in after-tax cash.
Bonus of GBP 2,000 after tax
A worked example showing why a GBP 2,000 bonus usually feels smaller than the headline figure once marginal deductions are applied.
Bonus of GBP 20,000 after tax
A larger worked bonus example showing why the cash you keep is often lower than the headline award suggests.
Bonus of GBP 5,000 after tax
A worked example showing how a GBP 5,000 bonus can shrink once tax, NI, and any student loan deductions are applied.
GBP 5,000 bonus with Plan 2 versus no student loan
A worked example showing how much a Plan 2 deduction can reduce the spendable value of a bonus compared with the same bonus and no student loan.
Day rates
Day rate of GBP 300 to annual take-home
A worked example showing how a GBP 300 day rate changes once realistic working weeks and tax are applied.
Day rate of GBP 500 to annual take-home
A worked example of how a stronger contractor headline rate translates into annual and monthly planning figures.
Job offers & comparisons
Comparing a day rate with a salaried role
A simple example of how to compare a contractor-style day rate with a standard salary offer.
Comparing a stronger pension versus a higher salary
A worked example showing why a lower-cash package can still be credible when pension support is materially better.
Comparing salary versus better pension contribution
A worked example showing how a stronger pension arrangement can narrow the gap between two compensation options.
Comparing two job offers
A worked example showing why two offers with similar gross pay can still deliver different take-home outcomes.
Comparing two job offers with different bonus structures
A worked example showing how two offers can look close on paper while landing differently in after-tax cash and certainty.
Salary of GBP 50,000 versus GBP 45,000 plus GBP 10,000 bonus
A worked example showing why a package with higher variable pay can still be weaker in spendable-pay terms than it looks on paper.
Salary of GBP 60,000 versus stronger pension contribution
A worked example showing how pension value can change a pay decision even when immediate take-home is lower.
Student loans & regional
GBP 35,000 with no student loan versus Plan 2
A worked example showing how much a Plan 2 deduction can change annual and monthly take-home pay on the same salary.
Plan 4 in Scotland on GBP 50,000
A worked example showing how Scottish tax and Plan 4 student-loan deductions combine at the same salary level.
Postgraduate loan on GBP 45,000
A worked example showing how much standalone postgraduate-loan repayment can reduce annual and monthly take-home pay.
Scotland versus rest of UK take-home on GBP 50,000
A worked example showing how the same gross salary can produce different take-home outcomes once the Scottish income-tax setting is applied.