Income / Salary Calculator

How much is £12,570 a year after tax?

For a £12,570 annual salary in 2026/27, estimated take-home pay is £11,942 a year (£995 a month) after Income Tax, National Insurance and a 5% pension.

Your take-home pay
£995 per month
Yearly
£11,942
Weekly
£230
Effective rate
0.0%
Marginal rate
0%

Deductions breakdown

Annual and monthly
Take-home
Pension
Item Annual Monthly
Gross salary £12,570 £1,048
Income Tax £0 £0
National Insurance £0 £0
Your pension £629 £52
Student loan £0 £0
Take-home pay £11,942 £995

Where you sit in the tax bands

2026/27 - England/Wales/NI
£12,570
£0£12.6k£50.3k£125k£150k

Personal allowance

0%

Basic rate

20%

Higher rate

40%

Additional rate

45%
On your next £1,000 earned, you'd keep £1,000. You're currently in the basic rate band.
Assumptions: PAYE Income Tax, employee Class 1 National Insurance and the selected tax code applied to a steady salary across the tax year. Bonuses, benefits in kind, and employer-specific payroll quirks are not included.

Your salary sits within the Personal Allowance for 2026/27, so no Income Tax is due.

How UK salary tax works

Take-home pay starts from gross salary and steps down through Income Tax, employee National Insurance, pension contributions, and any student loan repayments. Because each deduction has different thresholds, the gap between gross and net pay shifts as earnings rise.

That is why a rule-of-thumb percentage is usually wrong. The value of a salary calculator is that it shows the exact slices of pay being taxed instead of treating the whole salary as one flat rate.

Income Tax

England, Wales and Northern Ireland use a three-band system above the standard Personal Allowance. Scotland uses separate rates and thresholds, which is why the region toggle matters on this page.

At higher incomes, the Personal Allowance tapers away once adjusted net income passes £100,000, increasing the effective tax drag in that range.

National Insurance

Employee Class 1 National Insurance is separate from Income Tax. For 2026/27, employees pay 8% between the Primary Threshold and the Upper Earnings Limit, then 2% above that.

NI is charged through payroll and can move differently from Income Tax if pension salary sacrifice is being used.

Pension contributions

Pension contributions reduce take-home pay directly. If your employer uses salary sacrifice, they can also reduce the earnings used for Income Tax, employee NI, and student loan deductions.

Employer contributions are shown separately as pension funding because they increase what goes into the pension without being deducted from your pay.

Student loan

Student loan repayments are only charged above a plan-specific threshold. Postgraduate loans can stack with an undergraduate plan, which is why the marginal rate can jump once you are above both thresholds.

That makes salary comparisons more nuanced than gross pay alone suggests, especially for graduates near a threshold.