How Is PAYE Tax Calculated in the UK?

If you’re employed in the UK, chances are your payslip shows deductions under something called PAYE. Most people know it stands for Pay As You Earn, but far fewer understand how PAYE tax is actually calculated or why their take-home pay sometimes changes.

In this guide, we’ll break down how PAYE works in plain English — what’s taxed, when it’s taxed, and how HMRC decides how much to deduct from your salary.

What Is PAYE?

PAYE (Pay As You Earn) is the system HMRC uses to collect Income Tax and National Insurance directly from employees’ wages.

Instead of paying tax in one lump sum at the end of the year, PAYE spreads your tax bill across each payday. Your employer calculates and deducts tax before your salary reaches your bank account.

What PAYE Is Based On

Your PAYE deductions are calculated using several key pieces of information:

  • Your gross salary

  • Your tax code

  • Current Income Tax bands

  • National Insurance thresholds

  • Any pension contributions

  • Any student loan repayments

Each of these plays a role in determining how much you actually take home.

Step 1: Your Tax Code

Your tax code tells your employer how much tax-free income you’re entitled to.

For most people, the standard tax code is 1257L, which represents the personal allowance of £12,570 per year.

Your tax code can change if you:

  • Receive benefits through work

  • Have more than one job

  • Owe tax from a previous year

  • Claim certain allowances

If your tax code is wrong, your PAYE deductions will be wrong — it’s one of the most common causes of over- or under-payment.

Step 2: Income Tax Bands

Once your tax-free allowance is applied, the rest of your income is taxed using UK income tax bands.

For most employees in England and Northern Ireland, the bands are:

  • 20% basic rate

  • 40% higher rate

  • 45% additional rate

PAYE works these out cumulatively, meaning HMRC looks at how much you’ve earned so far in the tax year — not just that month alone.

Step 3: National Insurance Contributions

National Insurance (NI) is calculated separately from Income Tax.

Unlike Income Tax, NI:

  • Does not use your tax code

  • Is calculated per pay period

  • Has its own thresholds and rates

Most employees pay Class 1 National Insurance, which increases as earnings rise.

Step 4: Pension Contributions

If you’re enrolled in a workplace pension, your contributions reduce your taxable pay.

Depending on the pension scheme:

  • Tax may be deducted after pension contributions (relief at source)

  • Or tax relief may be applied automatically through PAYE (net pay arrangement)

This is why two people on the same salary can take home different amounts.

Step 5: Student Loan Repayments

If you have a student loan, repayments are also collected through PAYE once you earn over the repayment threshold.

HMRC uses:

  • Your loan plan type

  • Your gross earnings

  • The applicable repayment percentage

These deductions stop automatically once the loan is repaid.

Why Your Take-Home Pay Can Change

Even if your salary stays the same, your PAYE deductions can change because:

  • Your tax code has been updated

  • You’ve crossed a tax or NI threshold

  • You received a bonus or pay rise

  • You started or stopped pension contributions

  • HMRC corrected a previous underpayment

This is why payslips can look different month to month.

Estimating Your PAYE Take-Home Pay

Because PAYE uses cumulative calculations and multiple deductions, it’s not always easy to work out your take-home pay manually.

A UK salary calculator can help you estimate:

  • Income Tax

  • National Insurance

  • Pension deductions

  • Student loan repayments

  • Monthly and annual net pay

These tools are especially useful when comparing job offers or planning household budgets.

Final Thoughts

PAYE might seem complicated, but it follows a clear structure once you understand the building blocks.

Your tax code, income level, and deductions all work together to determine what lands in your bank account. If something looks wrong, checking your tax code and payslip breakdown is always the best first step.

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UK Tax & Salary Calculators

Our calculators help you estimate take-home pay, capital gains tax, and other common UK tax scenarios. Select the one you wish to try below: