£48,000 vs £58,000 After Tax 2025-26

Side-by-side UK take-home pay comparison · Income Tax + National Insurance

£48,000 gross
£38,080
£3,173/month · £732/week
Tax: £7,086 · NI: £2,834
Effective rate: 20.67%
£58,000 gross
£44,197
£3,683/month · £850/week
Tax: £10,632 · NI: £3,171
Effective rate: 23.8%

You keep £6,117 more per year

Earning £58,000 instead of £48,000 gives you £510 more per month (£118/week). Of the £10,000 gross difference, you keep 61% after tax and NI.

£

£48,000 — Income Tax bands

Band Tax
Personal Allowance
Basic Rate (20%) £7,086
Total Income Tax £7,086

£58,000 — Income Tax bands

Band Tax
Personal Allowance
Basic Rate (20%) £7,540
Higher Rate (40%) £3,092
Total Income Tax £10,632

Full breakdown — £48,000 vs £58,000

£48,000 £58,000 Difference
Gross salary £48,000 £58,000 +£10,000
Income Tax £7,086 £10,632 +£3,546
National Insurance £2,834 £3,171 +£337
Total deductions £9,920 £13,803 +£3,883
Net pay (annual) £38,080 £44,197 +£6,117
Net monthly £3,173 £3,683 +£510
Net weekly £732 £850 +£118
Net daily £146 £170 +£24
Effective tax rate 20.67% 23.8%
Marginal tax rate 28% 42%

£48,000 vs £58,000 after tax — what you actually keep

On a £48,000 salary, you take home £38,080 per year (£3,173/month). On £58,000, you take home £44,197 per year (£3,683/month). The £10,000 gross difference translates to £6,117 extra take-home — you keep 61% of the raise.

Income Tax on £48,000 is £7,086, rising to £10,632 on £58,000. National Insurance increases from £2,834 to £3,171. Together these deductions mean HMRC takes £3,883 of the £10,000 difference.

Why the effective rate changes

At £48,000 the effective tax rate is 20.67%, while at £58,000 it rises to 23.8%. This is because additional earnings are taxed at the marginal rate (42% on £58,000), which is higher than the blended average. The more you earn, the greater the proportion taken in tax and NI.

Frequently asked questions

How much more do I take home on £58,000 vs £48,000?

On £58,000 you take home £44,197/year (£3,683/month), compared to £38,080/year (£3,173/month) on £48,000. That is £6,117 more per year, or £510 more per month.

Why is the net difference (£6,117) less than the gross difference (£10,000)?

Of the £10,000 gross difference, you keep £6,117 (61%) after Income Tax and National Insurance. The rest goes to HMRC. Your marginal rate on £48,000 is 28% and on £58,000 it is 42%.

What is the effective tax rate on £48,000 vs £58,000?

The effective tax rate (Income Tax + NI as a percentage of gross) is 20.67% on £48,000 and 23.8% on £58,000. The higher salary has a higher effective rate because more income falls into higher tax bands.

How much tax and NI do I pay on £48,000 vs £58,000?

On £48,000: Income Tax £7,086 + NI £2,834 = £9,920 total deductions. On £58,000: Income Tax £10,632 + NI £3,171 = £13,803 total deductions.

Related comparisons:

All salary comparisons £48,000 After Tax £58,000 After Tax £28,000 vs £58,000£33,000 vs £58,000£38,000 vs £58,000£48,000 vs £50,000£48,000 vs £52,000£48,000 vs £55,000