The Hourly Wage Tax Calculator uses tax information from the tax year 2019 to show you take-home pay. See where that hard-earned money goes - Federal Income Tax, Social Security and other deductions. More information about the calculations performed is available on the about page. Net Income is the money you take home after all taxes and contributions have been deducted from your gross salary. Tax Due is the sum of all taxes and contributions that will be deducted from your gross salary. The deductions used in the above salary calculator assume you are not married and you have no dependents. British Income Tax.
Wondering how much difference that pay rise would make? The April 2019 values have now been made available to show you the most up-to-date information. Use the Take-Home Salary Calculator to work out just how much more you will have each month.
Your Details
How to use the Take-Home Calculator
To use the tax calculator, enter your annual salary (or the one you would like) in the salary box above
New! If you are earning a bonus payment one month, enter the £ value of the bonus into the bonus box for a side-by-side comparison of a normal month and a bonus month.
Find out the benefit of that overtime! Enter the number of hours, and the rate at which you will get paid. For example, for 5 hours a month at time and a half, enter 5 @ 1.5. There are two options in case you have two different overtime rates. To keep the calculations simple, overtime rates are based on a normal week of 37.5 hours.
New! If your main residence is in Scotland, tick the 'Resident in Scotland' box. This will apply the Scottish rates of income tax.
![Income Income](/uploads/1/2/4/8/124896682/215943898.png)
If you know your tax code, enter it into the tax code box for a more accurate take-home pay calculation. If you are unsure of your tax code just leave it blank and the default code will be applied.
If you have a pension which is deducted automatically, enter the percentage rate at which this is deducted and choose the type of pension into which you are contributing. Pension contributions are estimates, click to learn more about pension contributions on The Salary calculator.
If you receive Childcare vouchers as part of a salary sacrifice scheme, enter the value of the vouchers you receive each month into the field provided. If you signed up for the voucher scheme before 6th April 2011, tick the box - this affects the amount of tax relief you are due.
Select your age range from the options displayed. If you are married, tick the 'Married' box. Similarly, tick the 'Blind' box if you are blind.
If you do not pay National Insurance, for example, if you are over State Pension Age, tick the 'No NI' box.
New! There are now three repayment methods for Student Loans, which are known as Plan 1, Plan 2 and Postgraduate Loans. If you are repaying a student loan for a course which started before 1st September 2012, tick 'Plan 1', if you are repaying a student loan for a course which started on or after 1st September 2012, tick 'Plan 2'. If you are repaying a loan for a postgraduate course, tick 'Postgraduate'.
You can now choose the tax year that you wish to calculate. By default, the 2019 / 20 tax year is applied but if you wish to see salary calculations for other years, choose from the drop-down.
When you're done, click on the 'Calculate!' button, and the table on the right will display the information you requested from the tax calculator. You'll be able to see the gross salary, taxable amount, tax, national insurance and student loan repayments on annual, monthly, weekly and daily bases.
This is based on Income Tax, National Insurance and Student Loan information from April 2019. More information on tax rates here.