£30,000 with £1,500 Cycle to Work Salary Sacrifice 2025-26

England & Wales · Cycle to Work salary sacrifice · 2025-26 tax year

Annual tax saving
£420
Monthly saving
£35
New take-home/yr
£24,040
Net cost to pay
£1,080/yr
£

Before vs after £1,500 salary sacrifice — 2025-26

Item Before sacrifice After sacrifice Saving
Gross / effective salary £30,000 £28,500 −£1,500
Income Tax £3,486 £3,186 £300
National Insurance £1,394 £1,274 £120
Net take-home / yr £25,120 £24,040 £420
Monthly take-home £2,093 £2,003 £35
Net cost to take-home: £1,080/year · Employer NI saving (15%): £225/year

Cycle to work: effective discount on your bike

Bike & accessories cost (sacrifice) £1,500
Tax + NI saving (= effective discount) £420
Real cost to you £1,080
Effective discount 28%

Cycle to work sacrifice is typically spread over 12 months. The bike and safety equipment must be used primarily for qualifying journeys to work. No benefit-in-kind tax applies if conditions are met. The standard scheme limit is £1,000; employers can offer higher with HMRC authorisation.

£30,000 with £1,500 cycle to work salary sacrifice — explained

On a £30,000 salary, sacrificing £1,500 for cycle to work reduces your taxable earnings to £28,500. Your Income Tax drops from £3,486 to £3,186 (saving £300), and your National Insurance drops from £1,394 to £1,274 (saving £120).

The total annual saving is £420 (£35/month). The real cost to your take-home pay is only £1,080/year — because the tax and NI saving offsets a significant portion of the sacrifice.

Your employer also saves 15% employer NI on the sacrificed amount — £225/year. Many employers pass this saving on as an additional pension contribution or towards the cost of an EV lease.

Frequently asked questions

How much do I save with £1,500 cycle to work salary sacrifice on £30,000?

On a £30,000 salary, sacrificing £1,500 for cycle to work saves you £420 per year (£35/month) in combined Income Tax and National Insurance. Income Tax saving: £300. NI saving: £120.

Is salary sacrifice worth it on £30,000?

Yes — salary sacrifice is almost always beneficial if your employer offers it. On £30,000 with a £1,500 sacrifice, you save £420 in tax annually. Your take-home drops by only £1,080/year (not £1,500) because the tax saving offsets part of the sacrifice.

Does salary sacrifice affect my National Insurance on £30,000?

Yes — salary sacrifice reduces your National Insurance contributions because NI is calculated on your lower contractual salary. On £30,000 with £1,500 sacrifice, you save £120/year in NI. Your employer also saves 15% NI on the sacrificed amount (£225/year), which some employers pass back to employees.

What is my take-home after £1,500 cycle to work sacrifice on £30,000?

After a £1,500 cycle to work salary sacrifice on £30,000, your annual take-home is £24,040 (£2,003/month). Without the sacrifice, your take-home would be £25,120 (£2,093/month). The difference (£1,080/year) is the net cost to your take-home.

Does salary sacrifice affect my pension on £30,000?

For pension salary sacrifice: your pension pot grows by the full £1,500 sacrifice plus employer contributions. For EV or cycle sacrifice, your auto-enrolment pension is unaffected as it is based on qualifying earnings, not the sacrificed benefit. However, some mortgage lenders use post-sacrifice salary — confirm with your employer how they report income.

How does salary sacrifice affect State Pension on £30,000?

Salary sacrifice reduces your NI-able earnings. On £30,000 the effective salary after sacrifice is £28,500, which is well above the Lower Earnings Limit (£6,396 in 2025-26) — so your State Pension entitlement and NI record are unaffected.

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Related calculators:

£30,000 After Tax (no sacrifice) All Salary Sacrifice Pages Pension Contributions Income Tax Rates National Insurance