Maternity Pay After Tax on £60,000 Salary | 2025-26
SMP gross over 39 weeks: £12,408 · Effective SMP tax rate: 6.7%
SMP calculation breakdown 2025-26
| Period | Weekly rate | Weeks | Gross total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weeks 1–6 (90% AWE) | £1,038 | 6 | £6,231 |
| Weeks 7–39 (statutory cap £187.18) | £187 | 33 | £6,177 |
| Weeks 40–52 | £0 | 13 | Unpaid (statutory) |
| Income Tax + NI on SMP | −£835 | ||
| Net SMP take-home (39 weeks) | £11,573 | ||
SMP vs your normal salary
Your pre-maternity salary is £60,000/year. During maternity leave, your SMP averages £1,286/month net. Because your 90% AWE (£1,038/week) is above the £187.18 statutory cap, weeks 7–39 are paid at the flat rate.
How much maternity pay do you take home on £60,000?
On a £60,000 salary, your Statutory Maternity Pay take-home is £1,286 per month over the 39-week paid period. Your Average Weekly Earnings are £1,154, which determines your SMP rate.
For the first 6 weeks, you receive 90% of your AWE (£1,038/week), totalling £6,231. For weeks 7–39, you receive £187/week (the £187.18 statutory cap, since 90% of your AWE exceeds it), totalling £6,177. Total gross SMP over 39 weeks: £12,408.
After Income Tax and National Insurance, your net SMP is £11,573 over the full 39 weeks, averaging £1,286/month. The effective tax rate on your SMP is 6.7% — substantially lower than your normal salary tax rate because SMP is much lower income.
Tax refund during maternity leave
If you work part of the tax year before starting maternity leave, you may have overpaid tax through PAYE. Because your annual income drops significantly on SMP, HMRC may owe you a refund. Your employer should adjust PAYE automatically — if not, you can claim via HMRC after the tax year ends.
Frequently asked questions
How much SMP will I take home on a £60,000 salary?
On a £60,000 salary, your Statutory Maternity Pay take-home is approximately £1,286 per month over the 39-week paid period. Total SMP gross is £12,408, with £835 deducted in Income Tax and NI, leaving £11,573 net over 39 weeks.
Is SMP (Statutory Maternity Pay) taxable?
Yes. SMP is treated as employment income and is subject to both Income Tax and National Insurance, just like your regular salary. However, because SMP is significantly lower than your normal pay, your effective tax rate drops considerably. On a £60,000 salary, the effective tax rate on SMP is 6.7%.
Do I pay NI on maternity pay?
Yes, National Insurance contributions apply to SMP, but only on earnings above the NI Primary Threshold (£12,570/year in 2025-26). Because SMP is lower than most salaries, many people pay little or no NI during maternity leave. Your total SMP gross of £12,408 over 39 weeks falls below the annual NI threshold.
How is SMP calculated on a £60,000 salary?
Your Average Weekly Earnings (AWE) are £1,154 (£60,000 ÷ 52). Weeks 1–6: 90% of AWE = £1,038/week × 6 = £6,231. Weeks 7–39: statutory cap of £187.18/week (since 90% AWE of £1,038 exceeds the cap) × 33 = £6,177. Total SMP gross: £12,408.
Will I get a tax refund during maternity leave?
Possibly. If you worked part of the tax year at your normal salary before going on maternity leave, you may have already paid more tax than you owe for the full year (since your total annual income is much lower). HMRC will normally refund any overpayment through your payslip as your employer recalculates PAYE, or via a P800 at year-end.
What happens to NI contributions during maternity leave?
While receiving SMP, you continue to pay NI on any earnings above the Primary Threshold. Importantly, your NI record is protected during Statutory Maternity Leave — you receive National Insurance credits even for any unpaid leave weeks. This protects your State Pension entitlement.