£110,000 take-home pay in the UK (2026/27)
A £110,000 salary is in the range where the Personal Allowance starts to shrink. The allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 earned above £100,000.
Using the standard assumptions on this page, £110,000 gives estimated take-home pay of £72,357 a year, about £6,030 a month or £1,391 a week. About £37,643 of the gross salary goes to Income Tax and employee National Insurance, so roughly 34.2% is deducted before any pension or student loan changes.
Tax and National Insurance breakdown for £110k
The table below shows the main Income Tax and National Insurance deductions for this salary, so you can see how the take-home figure is built up.
| Tax or deduction | Amount this applies to | Rate | Annual amount |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £7,570 | 0% | £0 |
| Basic-rate income tax | £37,700 | 20% | £7,540 |
| Higher-rate income tax | £64,730 | 40% | £25,892 |
| Additional-rate income tax | £0 | 45% | £0 |
| Employee National Insurance | £97,430 | 8% / 2% | £4,211 |
| Total deductions | — | — | £37,643 |
| Estimated take-home pay | — | — | £72,357 |
Worked example: how £110k becomes £72,357 net
The calculation starts with gross salary of £110,000. The available Personal Allowance is £7,570, leaving £102,430 of taxable income. Income Tax is approximately £7,540 at basic rate, £25,892 at higher rate and £0 at additional rate. Employee National Insurance adds roughly £4,211.
That leaves estimated take-home pay of £72,357. Use this as a starting point before adding pension contributions, salary sacrifice, student loan repayments, Scottish tax bands or taxable benefits.
What happens to the Personal Allowance at £110k
Between £100,000 and £125,140, your Personal Allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 earned above £100,000. On £110k, the default Personal Allowance falls to £7,570. That means you keep much less of each extra pound in this range before National Insurance.
Pension contributions or salary sacrifice can reduce adjusted net income, which is why many people at this level look closely at pension planning.
What changed from 2025/26?
For the 2026/27 tax year, the core figures used here keep the standard Personal Allowance at £12,570, the main higher-rate threshold at £50,270 and employee National Insurance at 8% between the primary threshold and Upper Earnings Limit, then 2% above it.
In practice, most changes from one year to the next come from pay rises, pension choices or student loan thresholds rather than a major change to PAYE.
Where £110k sits in the UK income distribution
A gross salary of £110,000 is above the HMRC top-5% benchmark of £85,000 and below the top-1% benchmark of £201,000. It is high-earner territory before tax, but the take-home page is still needed because Personal Allowance taper, additional-rate tax and pension choices can change the net result sharply.
These ranking points use the same HMRC taxpayer income approach as the PayPrecise salary percentile calculator: individual gross income before tax, not household income and not take-home pay. For a deeper benchmark, compare this salary with the top 5% benchmark.
How to compare £110k with nearby salaries
Use the neighbouring salary pages to see how much of the next pay rise you would actually keep after Income Tax and National Insurance.
FAQs about £110k take-home pay
How much is £110k a month after tax?
Using the default England, Wales and Northern Ireland assumptions, £110k is about £6,030 a month after Income Tax and employee National Insurance, before pension and student loan deductions.
How much is £110k a week after tax?
The same default estimate is about £1,391 a week after Income Tax and employee National Insurance.
What is the annual take-home pay on £110k?
Estimated annual take-home pay is about £72,357, before pension contributions, student loans, benefits-in-kind or tax-code adjustments.
How much tax do you pay on extra income above £100k?
In the range where the Personal Allowance starts to shrink, Income Tax alone can take 60p from each extra £1 before employee National Insurance because the Personal Allowance is withdrawn as income rises.
How much pension keeps income under £100k?
Broadly, you would need adjusted-net-income reductions equal to the amount above £100,000, but the right figure depends on pension method, bonuses and benefits.
Does the £100k tax trap apply to bonuses?
Yes. The taper is based on adjusted net income, so a bonus can trigger or deepen the Personal Allowance withdrawal.
Are these £110k figures exact for everyone?
No. They are default estimates. Tax codes, Scottish tax, pension method, student loans, benefits-in-kind and payroll timing can change the result.
What percentile is a £110k salary in the UK?
Using HMRC taxpayer income benchmarks, £110k is above the £85,000 top-5% marker and below the £201,000 top-1% marker. For the exact calculator-style comparison, use the salary percentile calculator.
| Primary source | How PayPrecise uses it | Link |
|---|---|---|
| Income Tax rates and allowances (2026 to 2027) | Used for Personal Allowance and main UK tax bands in calculator/editorial explanations. | View source |
| National Insurance rates and thresholds | Used for employee National Insurance examples and take-home calculations. | View source |
| Student loan repayment thresholds | Used for Plan 1, 2, 4 and 5 examples on lower and mid-salary pages. | View source |
| ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2025 | Benchmark source for UK earnings context and salary comparisons. | View source |
Calculator outputs remain illustrative because tax codes, salary sacrifice, pension settings, benefits, commuting patterns and local costs vary by person.