Gross Salary vs Net Salary: What’s the Real Difference?
When you see a job advertised at £40,000 a year, that number is almost never what hits your bank account. It’s the gross salary — the figure before the government takes its share.
Understanding the gap between gross and net (take-home) pay is one of the most practically useful things you can do with your finances. It affects how you compare job offers, set a budget, and plan for the future.
This guide keeps it simple. No jargon, no fluff — just the numbers that matter.
What gross and net salary actually mean
The distinction is straightforward once you see it side by side.
GROSS SALARY
What you’re offered
Your total pay before any deductions. This is the number on your contract, your job offer, and the top line of your payslip. It includes your base wage plus any bonuses or taxable benefits.
NET SALARY
What you actually receive
Your take-home pay after income tax, National Insurance, and pension contributions have been removed. This is the number that matters for rent, bills, and everyday life.
“Your gross salary is the promise. Your net salary is the reality.”
In the UK, the difference between the two is typically 20–30% of gross for most earners — meaning if you’re offered £35,000, you should expect to take home somewhere between £24,500 and £28,000, depending on your pension and tax code.
What gets deducted — and how much
Three main deductions reduce your UK take-home pay. Here’s what each one is and roughly what it costs you.
Income tax
Income tax is calculated on your earnings above the Personal Allowance — currently £12,570 for most people. You don’t pay a penny of tax on that first chunk. Everything above it is taxed in bands:
| BAND | TAXABLE INCOME | RATE |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | Up to £12,570 | 0% |
| Basic rate | £12,571 – £50,270 | 20% |
| Higher rate | £50,271 – £125,140 | 40% |
| Additional rate | Over £125,140 | 45% |
National Insurance (NI)
National Insurance is a separate charge on top of income tax. For 2024/25, employees pay 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, then just 2% on anything above. It funds the NHS, State Pension, and benefits — but it still reduces your take-home pay significantly.
Pension contributions
If you’re auto-enrolled at work, you’ll typically contribute at least 5% of qualifying earnings, with your employer adding another 3%. This comes out before or after tax depending on your scheme — but either way, it reduces your monthly cash take-home.
£12,570
Personal Allowance
— tax-free for most employees
8%
NI rate on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270
20%
Basic rate income tax for most UK earners
A real payslip example: £35,000 gross salary
Let’s make this concrete. Here’s what a typical payslip looks like on a £35,000 gross salary with a 5% pension contribution in the 2024/25 tax year.
Income tax −£372.33
20% on taxable income above £12,570
National Insurance −£149.33
8% on earnings above NI threshold
Pension contribution −£145.83
Net take-home pay £2,249.18
Annual: ≈ £26,980
On a £35,000 salary, roughly £8,000 per year goes to tax deductions and pension. That’s a meaningful gap — and exactly why you should always calculate salary in net terms before making any financial decision.
Tip: When comparing two job offers, always convert both to net monthly income using a salary calculator. A £37,000 offer might leave you with less than a £34,000 role that includes salary sacrifice pension or other benefits.
How National Insurance affects your take-home pay
National Insurance is often misunderstood. Many people think of it as just “another tax” — but it does have specific purposes and rules worth knowing.
What NI pays for: The NHS, the State Pension, statutory sick pay, and maternity/paternity pay are all funded through NI contributions. You need 35 qualifying years of NI to receive the full new State Pension (£221.20/week in 2024/25).
The threshold cliff at £50,270: This is a key number. Once your income crosses £50,270, your NI rate drops from 8% to 2% — but your income tax rate simultaneously jumps from 20% to 40%. The combined effect is that every extra pound above this point is taxed very heavily. This makes salary sacrifice, pension contributions, and other reliefs particularly valuable for higher earners.
Employer NI is separate: Your employer also pays 13.8% NI on your earnings above £9,100 — you never see this on your payslip, but it directly affects how much companies can afford to pay. It’s why many employers prefer salary sacrifice schemes: they reduce their own NI bill too.
Five ways to increase your UK take-home pay
You can’t avoid tax, but you can absolutely reduce how much you pay — legitimately and straightforwardly.
01
Check your tax code
02
Use salary sacrifice
03
Claim work expenses
04
Marriage allowance
05
Maximise your ISA
06
Always calculate salary net
FAQs
Is the salary on a job advert gross or net?
How do I calculate my net salary quickly?
Why does my net pay change month to month?
Does a pay rise always mean more take-home?
Do pension contributions reduce my tax bill?
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