£50,000 Salary — 20% Pay Rise After Tax
A 20% pay rise from £50,000 to £60,000 adds £10,000 to your gross pay. After income tax and National Insurance, you keep £5,837/year (£486/month) extra.
Before vs after — annual figures 2025-26
| Before (£50,000) | After (£60,000) | Change | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £50,000 | £60,000 | +£10,000 |
| Income Tax | −£7,486 | −£11,432 | −£3,946 |
| National Insurance | −£2,994 | −£3,211 | −£217 |
| Take-home/year | £39,520 | £45,357 | +£5,837 |
| Take-home/month | £3,293 | £3,780 | +£486 |
| Effective tax rate | 20.96% | 24.41% |
England 2025-26 rates. Personal Allowance £12,570. See Scotland for Scottish income tax.
Why you keep less than 20% of your pay rise
A 20% pay rise of £10,000 sounds significant, but the effective marginal tax rate on this additional income is 0.4163% — meaning you only keep £5,837 of the £10,000 increase.
The marginal rate combines income tax (20% or 40% depending on your band) and employee NI (8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, 2% above). A pay rise that pushes you into the higher rate band (above £50,270) will be taxed at 42% on the portion above that threshold.
Calculate your exact take-home pay
Other pay rises from £50,000
Understanding your pay rise after tax
When you receive a 20% pay rise from £50,000 to £60,000, the £10,000 increase in gross pay does not translate directly into more take-home pay. Income Tax and National Insurance are deducted from the additional earnings at your marginal rate — the rate that applies to the top slice of your income.
For most employees earning between £12,570 and £50,270, the marginal rate is 28%: 20% income tax plus 8% employee NI. Above £50,270, NI drops to 2% but income tax rises to 40%, giving a marginal rate of 42%. If your pay rise takes you over the £50,270 threshold, the portion above it is taxed at 42% rather than 28%.
If you want to maximise the benefit of your pay rise, consider salary sacrifice into a pension — contributions made this way reduce your taxable pay, effectively giving you the full gross value of part of your rise tax-free. You can also use a pension calculator to model the long-term impact.
Related calculators: