SG SalaryGrid.uk

UK income tax · PAYE FY 2026/27 LIVE

Advanced UK Salary Grid.

Model PAYE, Class 1 NI, salary sacrifice pensions, student loans and the 60% PA-taper trap against the locked HMRC 2026/27 ruleset. Recalculates client-side as you type — penny-accurate, no telemetry.

Engine note · Full PAYE band-walk in integer pence — no float drift across the £12,570 → £125,140 stack, no third-party scripts touch your figures.

Scenarios modelled
2,418,902
Tax bands tracked
17
Median accuracy
±£0.04
SG

Advanced UK Salary Grid

2026/27 · Compliant

Real-time PAYE, NI & pension modelling — recalculated client-side against the locked HMRC 2026/27 ruleset.

Live · client-side
Tax jurisdiction
Tax year
01Interactive inputs
On an hourly / daily rate?
Gross Annual SalaryBefore deductions
£/ yr
£5,416.67 / mo · £1,250.00 / wk
Workplace PensionSalary sacrifice
%of gross
£3,250 sacrificed per year

Deconstructing the annual salaried PAYE framework

A fixed annual salary represents a contractual agreement for an aggregated gross sum, but its real-world execution through the UK's Pay As You Earn (PAYE) infrastructure is heavily dynamic. Rather than processing your earnings as a single annual entity, company payroll software slices your gross pay, tax allowances and insurance thresholds into exact monthly (1/12) or weekly (1/52) allocation blocks to calculate your net take-home pay.

The mechanics of cumulative tax calculations

Most salaried employees operate under a cumulative tax code (the standard 1257L for a full £12,570 Personal Allowance). Under a cumulative system, your payroll engine does not treat each month in isolation. Instead, it calculates your tax liability by looking at year-to-date earnings and comparing them against the proportion of allowances that have accumulated up to that point in the fiscal cycle.

By month 3 (June), for example, you are entitled to exactly 3/12ths of your annual Personal Allowance (£3,142.50) and 3/12ths of the Basic Rate band width. If you receive a mid-year bonus or a salary bump, the cumulative system automatically smooths the adjustment across the next payslip — spreading liabilities evenly across the remaining months rather than parking a single large bill at year end.

If your payslip carries a Week 1 / Month 1 marker (often an X or M1 suffix on the tax code), the engine is forced onto a non-cumulative basis. Each pay interval is then calculated completely in isolation, which can produce overpayments or underpayments whenever your monthly gross fluctuates.

Anatomy of the high-earner marginal tax traps

When modelling a salaried income on this platform, high earners must navigate structural policy rules that drastically alter the net take-home trajectory:

  • The 60% Personal Allowance taper: once adjusted net income crosses £100,000, the £12,570 Personal Allowance is clawed back at £1 for every £2 of additional gross. The allowance is fully extinguished by £125,140, producing a hidden 60% effective marginal rate across that band. The calculator flags this region automatically and models pension-escape scenarios.
  • The High Income Child Benefit Charge: if you or your partner claim Child Benefit, the household is hit with the HICBC once individual adjusted net income passes the statutory threshold (currently £60,000, with full clawback by £80,000). The charge scales progressively and is reconciled through self-assessment rather than PAYE.

Pension deductions: qualifying earnings vs. total salary

When you configure retirement options inside the calculator panel, your choice of pension contribution base materially changes the final take-home figure:

  • Qualifying earnings (auto-enrolment baseline): under statutory workplace auto-enrolment, pension percentages are not applied to your entire salary. They are restricted to the band between the Lower Earnings Limit and Upper Earnings Limit. On a £45,000 gross, contributions only attach to the slice of income sitting inside that band — leaving more cash on each monthly payslip.
  • Total pensionable salary (uncapped base): many corporate schemes bypass the statutory band entirely, applying the chosen percentage to every pound of contractual gross from the first penny. Immediate take-home falls, but long-term fund growth accelerates and any salary-sacrifice route also reduces Class 1 NI on the sacrificed slice.

Regional income tax divergence

The calculator core uses dedicated arrays to process regional deviations based on your location input. Workers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland share identical income tax thresholds, but residents in Scotland are subject to an independent six-band system managed by Holyrood. Because Scotland's higher-rate threshold sits well below the rest-of-UK boundary, salaried professionals there enter the 42% Scottish higher-rate band from £43,662 — long before the rest-UK £50,270 cliff — which is why location accuracy matters when auditing an employment contract.

HMRC 2026/27 snapshot FROZEN

Key thresholds locked in this build of the calculator.

  • Personal Allowance £12,570
  • Basic rate up to £50,270
  • Additional rate from £125,140
  • NI primary threshold £12,570
  • NI upper earnings £50,270
  • National Living Wage £12.71 / hr

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