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Graduate Salary Calculator

Free & Accurate
UK Tax Year 2026/27
Income Tax • National Insurance • Student Loan • Pension

💡

Top Tip

Enter the gross annual salary from your offer letter or payslip. All figures use the 2026/27 UK tax year – personal allowance frozen at £12,570, student loan thresholds updated for April 2026.

Your Details

£15,000£28,000£120,000




Your Results




Take-Home Pay
£0
after all deductions
Income Tax
£0
PAYE
National Insurance
£0
Class 1 employee
Student Loan
£0
repayment

Take-Home

Income Tax

Nat. Insurance

Effective Tax Rate (tax+NI)
0%

Full Breakdown

ItemAnnualMonthlyNotes


Graduate Salary Benchmarks

See how your take-home compares to typical 2026 graduate starting salaries. Click a sector to compare.

🎓 Average Graduate
📈 Finance
💻 Technology
⚙️ Engineering
🔥 Marketing
🏛️ Public Sector
⚖️ Law (City)
💊 Healthcare
📋 Consulting

🎓 Average Graduate vs Your Salary

Gross Salary£28,500
Annual Take-Home
Monthly Take-Home
Difference vs YoursCalculate first


Frequently Asked Questions

What are the income tax bands for 2026/27?

For 2026/27, the personal allowance remains frozen at £12,570. You pay 20% on earnings from £12,571 to £50,270, 40% from £50,271 to £125,140, and 45% above that. These thresholds are frozen until at least April 2031. If you earn over £100,000, your personal allowance tapers by £1 for every £2 above, disappearing entirely at £125,140.

What are the student loan repayment thresholds for 2026/27?

The 2026/27 thresholds (updated from April 2026) are: Plan 1 – £26,900, Plan 2 – £29,385, Plan 4 (Scotland) – £33,795, Plan 5 – £25,000, and Postgraduate – £21,000. All plans except Postgraduate charge 9% on earnings above the threshold; Postgraduate charges 6%.

Have National Insurance rates changed for 2026/27?

Employee NI rates are unchanged for 2026/27: you pay 8% on earnings between the primary threshold (£12,570) and the upper earnings limit (£50,270), and 2% on anything above. The lower earnings limit increased slightly to £6,708. Employer NI, however, rose to 15% from April 2025 – this affects employer costs but not your take-home pay.

Which student loan plan am I on?

Plan 1: started before September 2012 in England/Wales, or any time in Northern Ireland. Plan 2: started September 2012–July 2023 in England/Wales. Plan 4: studied in Scotland. Plan 5: started in England from August 2023 onwards. Postgraduate: Master’s or PhD loan. You can have both an undergraduate and postgraduate loan simultaneously – repayments are collected separately.

Should I opt into my workplace pension as a graduate?

Absolutely. Under auto-enrolment, your employer must contribute at least 3% on top of your contribution. Salary-sacrifice pensions also reduce your taxable income, so a basic-rate taxpayer effectively pays only 80p for every £1 contributed. Starting early means decades of compound growth – even a 5% contribution at 22 makes a substantial difference by retirement.

Why might my payslip differ from this calculator?

Common reasons include: a non-standard tax code (e.g. emergency tax, company benefits in kind), Scottish income tax if you live in Scotland (different bands apply), bonus or commission payments processed differently, or employer-specific deductions like company car or private healthcare. Always verify your tax code on your payslip or via your HMRC Personal Tax Account.

Marcus Reid

Written by
Marcus Reid

Marcus studied Accounting and Finance at the University of Nottingham and works as the Graduate Finance Editor at UniSorted.uk. He spent his first year after uni untangling tax codes, pension auto-enrolment, and why his take-home pay was so much less than his salary. Now he writes about payslips, tax, National Insurance, student loan repayments, credit building, and managing money after graduation. He also covers renting after university and the costs nobody warns you about. Contact: marcus@unisorted.co.uk

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