£28,000 Graduate Salary After Tax 2025-26
Take-home pay with and without Plan 2 student loan repayments.
£28,000 — without vs with Plan 2 student loan
| Item | Without student loan | With Plan 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £28,000 | £28,000 |
| Income Tax | −£3,086 | −£3,086 |
| National Insurance | −£1,234 | −£1,234 |
| Student Loan (Plan 2) | — | −£63 |
| Annual take-home | £23,680 | £23,617 |
| Monthly take-home | £1,973 | £1,968 |
Plan 2 student loan breakdown
Calculation: (£28,000 − £27,295) × 9% = £63/year = £5/month
What does a £28,000 graduate salary mean in practice?
On a £28,000 graduate salary, you take home £23,680/year (£1,973/month, £455/week, £91/day). Based on a 37.5-hour week, your net hourly equivalent is £12.14 without student loan or £12.11 with Plan 2 deducted. Your salary is 20% below the UK median salary of £35,000 and 7% below the typical UK graduate starting salary of ~£30,000.
Because your salary exceeds the Plan 2 threshold of £27,295, HMRC deducts £5/month (£63/year) automatically through PAYE — you never see this money. This reduces take-home to £23,617/year. Your earnings sit in the Basic Rate (20%) band: after tax, NI, and student loan, you keep approximately 100p in every £1 of gross pay.
As a new graduate on PAYE, your employer also makes Employer NI contributions (13.8% on earnings above £9,100) — this does not reduce your take-home but represents the full cost of employing you. If you have both a Plan 2 loan and a Postgraduate loan, both are deducted simultaneously through PAYE, reducing take-home further. Consider salary sacrifice into a pension if your employer matches contributions — this reduces your taxable pay and may also reduce your student loan repayments.
Personalised insights — £28,000 graduate salary
On £28,000 you keep 85p per £1 (84p with Plan 2), losing the equivalent of £17 in IT+NI each working day. That gross sits 1.18× the annualised National Living Wage (£23,810) and is £3,000 above the typical graduate entry median of £25,000 (net £21,520). London graduate roles typically pay a 20% weighting premium — at £33,600 gross you would take home £4,032/year more, though London rent absorbs ~£300-£500/month of that uplift vs regional hubs like Manchester, Bristol or Leeds. Your first £5k promotion would add £3,600 net (marginal rate 28%). You are using 100% of your Personal Allowance. Below the Higher Rate threshold (£50,270), a Stocks & Shares ISA (20k/year tax-free) is typically the most flexible saving vehicle — complementary to the 3-5% employer-matched pension auto-enrolment minimum. Saving 20% of take-home (£395/month) fills a full £20,000 ISA in 51 months — a strong 12-month habit to set in graduate year one.
Frequently asked questions
When do I start repaying my student loan on £28,000?
Repayments begin immediately since your salary of £28,000 exceeds the £27,295 Plan 2 threshold. Repayments are taken automatically through PAYE.
How much student loan do I repay per month on £28,000?
On £28,000, your monthly Plan 2 repayment is £5 (£63/year). This is 9% of earnings above £27,295.
Does student loan affect my take-home pay on £28,000?
Yes. Without Plan 2, you take home £23,680/year (£1,973/month). With Plan 2 repayments, you take home £23,617/year (£1,968/month). The difference is £63/year.
What happens if I earn below the repayment threshold?
If your income is at or below £27,295 (Plan 2 threshold for 2025-26), no student loan repayments are deducted — even if you have an outstanding loan balance. Repayments automatically start and stop based on your earnings each pay period.
How much student loan do I repay in total on £28,000 per year?
On £28,000/year, your annual Plan 2 student loan repayment is £63 — calculated as 9% of (£28,000 minus £27,295). This works out to £5/month deducted through PAYE.
What does a £28,000 graduate salary work out to per hour after tax?
A £28,000 graduate salary equates to a gross hourly rate of £14.36 (based on 37.5 hours/week). After tax and NI, your net hourly rate is £12.14 without student loan, or £12.11 with Plan 2 repayments deducted.