Salary · 2025/26
£40,000 after tax: your take-home pay
A £40,000 salary leaves £32,320 a year after tax and National Insurance — £2,693 a month. Here's the full breakdown, the Scottish figure, and what each party's plans would change.
The breakdown (England, Wales & NI)
| Gross salary | £40,000 |
| Income tax | −£5,486 |
| National Insurance | −£2,194 |
| Take-home per year | £32,320 |
| Per month | £2,693 |
| Per week | £622 |
Single employment, standard 1257L tax code, no pension, student loan or benefits in kind — add those with the full take-home pay calculator. In Scotland the same salary takes home £32,223 (£97 more tax under Scottish bands).
What each party would do to £40,000
- Reform UK — the £20,000 tax-free allowance would add about £1,486 a year (£124/month) to this salary.
- Greens — the NI rise starts at £50,270, so this salary is unaffected.
- Labour — rates unchanged, but the threshold freeze to 2030/31 means each pay rise is taxed harder than the last: see the pay rise calculator and fiscal drag.
- Your marginal rate is about 28% — that's what the next £1 you earn loses to tax and NI.
See the whole picture — housing, family, pension — with the all-party impact calculator, or the tax detail with the income tax calculator.