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    UK Tax Bracket Calculator

    See exactly how much Income Tax you owe per band for 2025/26. Includes Personal Allowance taper for high earners.

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    How UK Income Tax Actually Works

    The biggest misconception about tax? That moving into a higher bracket means all your income gets taxed at the higher rate. It doesn't. Tax bands are marginal — only the income within each band is taxed at that rate. If you earn £55,000, you don't pay 40% on the lot. You pay 0% on the first £12,570, 20% on the next £37,700, and 40% only on the £4,730 above £50,270.

    Think of it like stacking blocks. Each block sits in its own band and gets taxed at that band's rate. The blocks at the bottom are always taxed less, regardless of how tall the stack gets. You never lose money by earning more — the new income is just taxed at a higher marginal rate.

    Well, almost never. There's one nasty exception: the £100,000-£125,140 range. Here, you lose your Personal Allowance at a rate of £1 for every £2 earned, creating an effective marginal rate of 60%. That's a genuine tax trap.

    2025/26 UK Income Tax Bands

    BandIncome RangeTax RateTax on Band
    Personal Allowance£0 - £12,5700%£0
    Basic Rate£12,571 - £50,27020%Up to £7,540
    Higher Rate£50,271 - £125,14040%Up to £29,948
    Additional RateOver £125,14045%No cap

    What this means for you: Someone earning exactly £50,270 pays £7,540 in income tax — an effective rate of 15%. Someone earning £100,000 pays £27,432 — an effective rate of 27.4%. The marginal rate jumps, but the effective rate climbs gradually.

    The £100K Tax Trap Explained

    Gross IncomePersonal AllowanceIncome TaxEffective Marginal Rate
    £100,000£12,570£27,43240%
    £105,000£10,070£29,93260%
    £110,000£7,570£32,43260%
    £120,000£2,570£37,43260%
    £125,140£0£39,48860%
    £130,000£0£41,67545%

    What this means for you: Between £100K and £125,140, every extra £100 earned costs you £60 in tax. That's worse than the additional rate (45%). If you're in this zone, maximise pension contributions to bring taxable income below £100K — you get 60p tax relief on every pound contributed.

    Smart Ways to Reduce Your Tax Bill

    Pension contributions

    Salary sacrifice into a pension reduces your taxable income. A higher-rate taxpayer contributing £10,000 saves £4,000 in tax. If you're in the 60% trap zone, pension contributions are even more powerful.

    ISA allowance (£20,000/year)

    All growth inside an ISA is tax-free — no income tax, no capital gains tax, no dividend tax. Use it every year. A stocks and shares ISA growing at 7% turns £20K/year into £280K+ over 10 years, all tax-free.

    Marriage Allowance

    If one spouse earns under £12,570, they can transfer 10% of their Personal Allowance to the higher earner. Worth up to £252/year. Easy to claim via HMRC — and you can backdate 4 years.

    Charitable Gift Aid

    The charity claims 25% from HMRC. Higher-rate taxpayers can claim an additional 20% on their self-assessment. A £100 donation effectively costs a 40% taxpayer just £60.

    Key Tax Dates to Remember

    DateWhat HappensWho It Affects
    6 AprilNew tax year starts — allowances resetEveryone
    5 OctoberDeadline to register for Self Assessment (new self-employed)Self-employed, landlords
    31 OctoberPaper tax return deadlineAnyone filing on paper
    31 JanuaryOnline tax return + payment deadlineSelf Assessment filers
    31 JulySecond payment on account dueSelf Assessment (if you owe over £1,000)

    Miss the 31 January deadline? You'll get an automatic £100 penalty — even if you owe nothing. After 3 months, daily penalties of £10 kick in (up to £900). After 6 months, HMRC adds 5% of the tax owed on top. Set a calendar reminder for December to give yourself time.

    Related Tools

    Common uses

    • Seeing exactly how much Income Tax you owe per band
    • Understanding the Personal Allowance taper above £100K
    • Calculating your effective tax rate on different incomes
    • Planning salary sacrifice or pension contributions to reduce tax
    • Comparing take-home pay at different salary levels

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    Frequently Asked Questions