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£23,000 First Job After Tax in Glasgow 2025-26

Scotland · Income Tax + NI · With and without student loan

Take-home/year
£20,108
Monthly
£1,676
Weekly
£387
Effective rate
12.6%

£23,000 in Glasgow — take-home with and without student loan

Item Without student loan With Plan 2
Gross salary £23,000 £23,000
Personal Allowance (tax-free) £12,570 £12,570
Income Tax −£2,058 −£2,058
National Insurance (8%) −£834 −£834
Student Loan Plan 2 (9%) £0 (below threshold)
Annual take-home £20,108 £20,108
Monthly take-home £1,676 £1,676

No student loan repayments at £23,000

Your salary is below the £27,295 Plan 2 threshold — so £0 is deducted for student loan, regardless of your outstanding balance. Repayments start automatically once you exceed the threshold.

Scottish income tax rates apply in Glasgow

Scottish income tax rates apply. Scotland has different bands (Starter 19%, Basic 20%, Intermediate 21%, Higher 42%) which differ from England/Wales above £15,397.

Cost of living in Glasgow

Glasgow is the most affordable major Scottish city. Room rent averages £550–£750/month. Scottish income tax rates apply. Monthly living costs typically run £1,000–£1,350, making Glasgow one of the best-value options for first-job workers in Scotland.

Personalised insights — £23,000 in Glasgow

Keep per £1 (no loan)
87p
Keep per £1 (Plan 2)
87p
Tax per working day
£11
vs £25k UK first-job median
−£2,000
× National Living Wage
0.97×
+£5k raise → extra net
+£3,572
Personal Allowance used
100%
£20k ISA fill (20% save)
60 mo

In Glasgow on £23,000 you keep 87p per £1 (87p with Plan 2), losing £11/working day to Income Tax and NI. That gross sits 0.97× the annualised National Living Wage (£23,810) and is £2,000 below the UK first-job median of £25,000 (net £21,520). Moving to London at +15% pay would add £2,456/year from your net — but local rent and transport typically shift by an even larger margin (London rent runs £300-£500/month above most regional cities). Your first pay rise of +£5k would add £3,572 to your annual net. You are using 100% of your £12,570 Personal Allowance. At 20% savings discipline (£335/month into a Stocks & Shares ISA), you fill the full £20,000 ISA allowance in 60 months — early compounding is the single largest financial advantage of starting young.

Frequently asked questions

How much tax do I pay on my first job at £23,000 in Glasgow?

On a £23,000 first job in Glasgow, you pay £2,058 Income Tax and £834 National Insurance in 2025-26. Your take-home pay is £20,108/year or £1,676/month. The first £12,570 of your salary is tax-free (Personal Allowance). Income Tax is 20% on earnings above that.

Do I pay student loan on my first job at £23,000?

No — your salary of £23,000 is below the £27,295 Plan 2 repayment threshold. No student loan is deducted from your pay. Repayments only begin when your income exceeds £27,295.

What will I actually take home each month on £23,000 in Glasgow?

£23,000 a year in Glasgow works out at £1,676/month take-home after Income Tax and National Insurance. If you have a Plan 2 student loan, your monthly take-home is £1,676.

Why is my first payslip different from what I expected?

Many first-job workers are put on an emergency tax code (1257L W1/M1) which treats each pay period independently rather than cumulatively. This can mean you pay too much or too little tax in early months. HMRC usually corrects this automatically. You can speed this up by logging into your HMRC personal tax account. Your correct code is typically 1257L.

What does £23,000 in Glasgow work out to per hour and per day?

£23,000/year in Glasgow equals approximately £12/hr gross (37.5hr/wk) or £77/day take-home (260 working days). Your net hourly after Income Tax and NI is £10/hr. Monthly: £1,676.

What benefits and perks should I look for in my first job in Glasgow?

Beyond your £23,000 salary (£1,676/month take-home), look for: (1) Pension — at minimum employers must auto-enrol you at 3% employer + 5% employee. (2) Season ticket loan if commuting in Glasgow. (3) Cycle to work scheme (salary sacrifice). (4) Healthcare/dental. (5) Training budget. Each benefit not taken in cash avoids income tax and NI, so Scotland residents should maximise salary-sacrifice benefits.

Related pages:

All first-job cities £23,000 after tax Browse jobs in Glasgow by profession Graduate salary after tax Student Loan Calculator Income Tax rates Pension contributions Council tax in Glasgow

From our blog

→ First job tax guide (UK 2025-26) → Paying tax when starting a new job