£100,000 Salary with Plan 2 Student Loan After Tax 2025-26
Started September 2012 to July 2023 · Repayment threshold: £27,295 · Rate: 9%
£100,000 + Plan 2 student loan — full breakdown 2025-26
| Item | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | £100,000 | £8,333 |
| Personal Allowance (tax-free) | £12,570 | £1,048 |
| Income Tax | −£27,432 | −£2,286 |
| National Insurance | −£4,011 | −£334 |
| Plan 2 Repayment (9% above £27,295) | −£6,543 | −£545 |
| Net take-home | £62,014 | £5,168 |
About Plan 2 repayment
| Repayment threshold | £27,295/year |
| Repayment rate | 9% of income above threshold |
| Your repayable income | £72,705/year |
| Annual repayment | £6,543 |
| Monthly repayment | £545 |
Started September 2012 to July 2023. Repayments are collected automatically through PAYE. The loan is written off after a set period (typically 25-40 years depending on plan).
£100,000 take-home pay with Plan 2 student loan
On a £100,000 salary in 2025-26 with a Plan 2 student loan, your total deductions are: Income Tax (£27,432), National Insurance (£4,011), and Plan 2 repayment (£6,543). This leaves you with £62,014 per year take-home (£5,168/month).
Plan 2 repayments are calculated at 9% of your income above the £27,295 threshold. At £100,000, your income above the threshold is £72,705, resulting in a £6,543 annual repayment.
Student loan repayments are collected through PAYE alongside your Income Tax and National Insurance, but they are separate from the tax system. They do not affect your taxable income or change your Income Tax or NI bills.
Frequently asked questions
How much is £100,000 after tax with a Plan 2 student loan?
On a £100,000 salary in 2025-26 with a Plan 2 student loan, you take home £62,014/year (£5,168/month). You pay £27,432 in Income Tax, £4,011 in National Insurance, and £6,543 in student loan repayments.
How much do I repay on Plan 2 at £100,000?
On Plan 2, you repay 9% of income above the £27,295 threshold. At £100,000, your repayable income is £72,705, so your annual repayment is £6,543 (£545/month).
Why is my take-home lower than I expected on £100,000 with a student loan?
On £100,000 with a Plan 2 student loan, your payslip deducts Income Tax (£27,432/yr), National Insurance (£4,011/yr), and loan repayment (£6,543/yr) — a combined £37,986/year leaving you £62,014 take-home. The loan repayment alone costs £545/month. Repayments are automatically collected through PAYE; you do not need to manage them yourself.
Will I ever finish repaying my student loan?
Plan 2 loans are written off after 30 years (Plan 2), 25 years (Plan 1), or 40 years (Plan 5) — even if not fully repaid. At £100,000, you repay £6,543/year (9% above the £27,295 threshold). Whether your loan is cleared before write-off depends on your total debt, salary growth, and the prevailing interest rate on your plan. Many graduates never fully repay, particularly on Plan 2.
What will I actually take home each month on £100,000 with Plan 2?
On £100,000 with a Plan 2 student loan, you take home £5,168 per month. Each month your payslip deducts: Income Tax £2,286, National Insurance £334, and student loan repayment £545. Without the student loan, you would take home £5,713/month.
Does student loan repayment affect my Income Tax in the UK?
No — student loan repayments in the UK are not a tax deduction. They do not reduce your taxable income or Income Tax bill. Repayments are collected via PAYE alongside Income Tax and NI, but calculated separately on income above your plan threshold.