£75,000 sounds respectable on paper — until you stack London rent next to net pay.
Whether you're negotiating, relocating, or comparing UK cities, you need take-home in GBP, not vibes. Below is £75,000 gross in London for 2026/2027: income tax, Class 1 NI, and PAYE — straight from our paycheck engine.
Let's be honest about why you're here.
You got an offer — or a raise — that says £75,000 on paper. You want to know what actually hits your bank account in London, not what a generic "UK average" calculator says. London uses England, Wales & Northern Ireland (RUK) HMRC bands — there is no separate London income tax. What makes London expensive is rent, Council Tax, and commuting, not a different PAYE stack.
Here's what our own tax engine says for 2026/2027, because we ran the same math as the UK paycheck calculator.
The Take-Home Number (Single, £75,000 PAYE, 2026/2027)
We used tax year 2026/2027, single, £75,000 gross employment income, 1257L tax code, no workplace pension, no student loans, no Marriage Allowance — exactly how the UK calculator runs a clean baseline.
Annual take-home (after England, Wales & NI income tax + Class 1 NI): about £54,057
That's about £4,505 per month before voluntary deductions (pension, benefits, etc.).
| Piece | Annual (approx.) |
|---|---|
| Income tax | £17,432 |
| Class 1 National Insurance | £3,511 |
Total income tax + NI: about £20,943 of your £75,000 gross.
Run your own scenario (pension, student loans, tax code, Scotland toggle) with the UK paycheck calculator or Scotland calculator if you're comparing Edinburgh/Glasgow offers.
See also: take-home salary table on the calculator page.
Why London feels different at £75,000
Our move-out cost model assigns London COL index 175 (national baseline ≈ 100). London uses England, Wales & Northern Ireland (RUK) HMRC income tax bands — same as Manchester or Birmingham at the same gross. There is no separate London wage tax; the premium is housing and commuting, not a different PAYE stack.
£75,000 on PAYE: income tax, NI, and what "gross" hides
We assume tax year 2026/27, single, 1257L tax code, no workplace pension, no student loans, no Marriage Allowance — the same clean PAYE baseline as our UK paycheck calculator.
At £75,000 gross, NI still applies on employment income up to the upper earnings limit. Income tax deepens vs. entry-level salaries — net pay grows slower than gross because PAYE is progressive.
Practical: Build your lease budget from ~£4,505/month take-home, not £75,000 on paper. Salary sacrifice pension saves tax and NI; net pay arrangements save tax only.
The real cost breakdown (2026)
Directional monthly ranges for a single person — see our London comfortable salary guide for life-stage bands:
Rent: One-bedroom £1,800–£2,400 depending on neighbourhood; central corridors skew high.
Transport: £150–£350 (Travelcard / contactless cap + occasional rides) — many workers are public-transport-heavy in the urban core.
Groceries: £350–£500 cooking at home; dining out adds fast in major metros.
Utilities: £120–£200 (confirm if heating is included); confirm whether heating/electricity is included in rent.
Council Tax: Council Tax Band D often £1,600–£2,200/year depending on borough — roughly £130–£185/month.
VAT: 20% on most goods and services — not deducted from PAYE, but it shapes spendable income.
~£4,505/month net vs. fixed costs (sketch)
| Item | Rough monthly |
|---|---|
| Rent (1BR, decent area) | £1,800–£2,400 |
| Groceries | £350–£500 |
| Utilities + broadband | £120–£200 (confirm if heating is included) |
| Transport | £150–£350 (Travelcard / contactless cap + occasional rides) |
| Council Tax (share) | £110–£185/month |
Stack those against ~£4,505/month take-home: housing + Council Tax + commute eat first.
£75,000 in London
At £75,000 gross, you're below the solo "comfortable" band we associate with London (~£110k gross in our comfortable guide) — flat shares and outer zones are common levers.
Flat share: A two-bedroom split in many zones can bring housing share to £900–£1,300 — the most common lever at £50k–£75k in London.
Solo one-bedroom: Solo one-bedroom at market rent is often tight at mid-range gross unless the lease is below typical inner-London asks.
Scotland vs RUK: At £75,000 gross, Scotland (Edinburgh/Glasgow) would clear about £52,007/year — about £2,050/year less than RUK on this baseline. See Scotland calculator.
Kids / childcare: Full-time nursery in major metros often runs £1,200–£1,800/month — household income needs jump fast.
London vs. other UK cities at the same £75,000 gross
Same offer letter, different city — our 2026 engine (single, 1257L, no pension, no student loans):
| City | Annual take-home (approx.) | Tax band group |
|---|---|---|
| London | £54,057 | RUK |
| Manchester | £54,057 | RUK |
| Birmingham | £54,057 | RUK |
| Bristol | £54,057 | RUK |
| Leeds | £54,057 | RUK |
| Cardiff | £54,057 | RUK |
| Edinburgh | £52,007 | SCT |
| Glasgow | £52,007 | SCT |
London (this page): £54,057/year (~£4,505/month).
Important: All RUK cities share the same take-home at identical gross — the table differences for London vs Leeds are rounding only. What changes is rent and COL, not PAYE math.
At the same gross, take-home is identical across RUK cities — London vs Manchester is about rent, not tax. See our take-home salary table for quick reference.
Use our UK take-home salary table and Scotland salary table for quick reference at common gross levels.
At a glance: £75,000 in London (2026)
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Monthly take-home (this baseline)? | ~£4,505 |
| Annual take-home? | £54,057 |
| Total income tax + NI? | £20,943 |
| Income tax (approx.)? | £17,432 |
| Class 1 NI (approx.)? | £3,511 |
| Tax band group? | England, Wales & NI |
| Is £75,000 enough here? | Tight for solo market 1BR; flat shares are the normal lever |
Check withholding on the England, Wales & NI paycheck calculator.
Who this is for
New grads, UK movers, and anyone comparing London vs Manchester vs Edinburgh offers who needs net pay in GBP, not generic "UK average" guesses.
What changes your paycheck vs. our table
We kept the baseline simple on purpose: single, 1257L, no pension, no student loans, no bonus math. Real life adds:
- Salary sacrifice pension: Saves income tax and NI — often hundreds per month at £75,000.
- Student loans: Plan 2, Plan 4 (Scotland), or postgraduate — deducted through PAYE above thresholds.
- Tax codes: BR, D0, K codes change withholding — rerun with your code.
- Scotland vs England: If you're comparing Edinburgh to Manchester, use the Scotland calculator for the Scottish side.
Mistakes people make
1. Using a US tax mental model. UK PAYE uses income tax bands + Class 1 NI, not FICA.
2. Budgeting from gross. £75,000 on the offer letter is not £4,505/month in your account.
3. Assuming London has different income tax. It doesn't — rent and Council Tax are the London premium.
4. Comparing Scotland on gross only. At £75,000, RUK take-home is about £54,057 vs Scotland £52,007 — then stack rent.
5. Forgetting Council Tax. It's a separate household bill, not in PAYE.
Short answers
How much is £75,000 after taxes in London? About £54,057/year (~£4,505/month) in our 2026 baseline (rounded).
Is £75,000 a good salary in London? Solid nationally — whether it feels comfortable is mostly rent + neighbourhood.
Does London have a city income tax? No separate municipal wage tax — you pay England, Wales & NI income tax + Class 1 NI through PAYE.
Make these numbers yours
- England, Wales & NI paycheck calculator — tax code, pension, student loans, Scotland toggle
- Scotland paycheck calculator — Revenue Scotland bands side by side
- London comfortable salary — life-stage and comfortable salary bands
- Take-home salary table — £20k–£150k reference
- Life budget planner — plug in ~£4,505/month and stress-test rent
Tax rules change with each Budget — rerun the calculator before you sign a lease or accept an offer. Figures are rounded; year-end HMRC reconciliation may differ slightly from monthly PAYE.
FAQ
How much is £75,000 after taxes in London in 2026?
About £54,057/year take-home (~£4,505/month) for single, 1257L, no pension, no student loans, £75,000 employment income — from our UK paycheck calculator.
Do I pay income tax and National Insurance in London?
Yes — UK employees pay both through PAYE. On this baseline, income tax is about £17,432 and Class 1 NI about £3,511.
Is income tax different in Scotland?
Yes for Edinburgh and Glasgow — Scotland uses six bands (Revenue Scotland). England, Wales, and Northern Ireland share RUK HMRC bands. NI is identical UK-wide.
Is £75,000 enough to live alone in London?
Solo one-bedroom at market rent is often tight at mid-range gross unless the lease is below typical inner-London asks. At ~£4,505/month net, flat shares or value neighbourhoods are common levers.
How does London compare to London at the same salary?
At £75,000 gross, take-home is identical to London — both use RUK bands. London's challenge is rent (£1,800–£2,400 vs London £1,800–£2,400). Use our UK calculator to stress-test your scenario.
Does pension change these numbers?
Yes — salary sacrifice saves tax and NI; net pay saves tax only. Rerun the calculator with your planned contribution.
The Bottom Line
- £54,057 take-home on £75,000 gross in London (2026, single, 1257L, our engine).
- England, Wales & NI income tax + Class 1 NI — budget in net, not gross.
- COL index 175 and rent decide whether £75,000 feels tight or workable more than the headline salary.
*Take-home uses this site's UK tax engine for England, Wales & NI, tax year 2026/27. Rent context from our move-out cost model and London comfortable salary. Not financial advice.*