Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Success! Now Check Your Email

To complete Subscribe, click the confirmation link in your inbox. If it doesn’t arrive within 3 minutes, check your spam folder.

Ok, Thanks
Home Salary Guide Is £135,000 a Good Salary in the UK? Take-Home, Tax & Verdict (2026/27)
Salary Guide

Is £135,000 a Good Salary in the UK? Take-Home, Tax & Verdict (2026/27)

Is £135,000 a good UK salary in 2026? Full take-home breakdown, tax bands, how it compares to UK median, city-by-city verdict and FAQ.

CT
Chandraketu Tripathi
Finance Editor, Kaeltripton
Published 23 Apr 2026
Last reviewed 23 Apr 2026
✓ Fact-checked
Advertisement
The Editor Verdict
Is £135,000 a good salary in the UK?
Additional-rate territory — £135,000 sits above the £125,140 threshold and puts you in the top 2% of uk earners.

A gross salary of £135,000 sits above the UK median full-time salary of £37,430 by £97,570. Whether it counts as a "good" salary depends on where you live, whether you have dependants, and what stage of life you're in. This guide gives you the 2026/27 numbers — take-home pay, what it compares to, what it unlocks, and the specific tax traps that matter at this income level.

Most people earning around £135,000 in the UK are peak earnings, wealth and legacy planning, often considering financial independence timelines. Typical roles at this salary include senior directors, experienced consultants, London senior tech/finance/legal, 20-27 years experience, established partners, company founders.

Take-home pay on £135,000 in 2026/27

Here is exactly how £135,000 breaks down under UK 2026/27 tax rules (England, Wales and Northern Ireland — Scotland has different bands):

Breakdown No student loan With Plan 2 loan
Gross annual salary £135,000 £135,000
Income tax −£47,582 −£47,582
National Insurance (Class 1) −£4,711 −£4,711
Plan 2 student loan −£9,588
Take-home (net annual) £82,708 £73,120
Take-home (net monthly) £6,892 £6,093
Effective tax rate 38.7% 45.8%

Tax angle at £135,000: 47% marginal rate. Pension salary sacrifice still valuable but relief is at 45% not 60%. VCT/EIS (30% income tax relief) become attractive alternatives.

The honest verdict on £135,000 in 2026

£135,000 is firmly additional-rate. Personal Allowance is gone. Take-home is around £84,000. You're in pure 47% marginal rate territory (45% tax + 2% NI) — still high but lower than the 60% trap below £125,140. Every financial planning decision at this level should be tax-first.

What £135,000 unlocks

full pension annual allowance (£60k), VCT/EIS tax reliefs, BTL portfolio scaling, quality family life including London, private schools.

What it doesn't

any Personal Allowance, state childcare support, basic-rate pension relief (yours is 45%).

The tax trap at £135,000

Annual allowance for pension begins tapering at 'threshold income' £200,000 + 'adjusted income' £260,000. Keep good records of employer contributions. Child benefit long gone.

Is £135,000 a good salary by city?

The same salary buys radically different lives across the UK. Here's how £135,000 stacks up in major UK cities in 2026:

City Verdict at £135,000
London Very comfortable family life across central zones.
Manchester Top 0.5% lifestyle.
Birmingham Top 0.5% lifestyle.
Glasgow Top 0.3% regional.
Cardiff Top 0.3% regional.

How £135,000 compares to UK earnings

£135k is approximately the 97.8th percentile.

The UK median full-time salary is £37,430 (ONS 2025). Your £135,000 gross sits £97,570 above this median — a premium of 261%.

Important: This is general information, not personalised tax or financial advice. Tax rules change, and your personal circumstances — student loan plan, pension scheme, region (Scotland has different bands), benefits and allowances — will affect your real take-home pay. Check your specific position with a qualified accountant or use HMRC's own calculator at gov.uk/estimate-income-tax.

Frequently asked questions

What is the take-home pay on £135,000 per month in the UK 2026/27?

After income tax and National Insurance, £135,000 gross leaves you with £6,892 per month (or £1,591 per week) if you have no student loan. With a Plan 2 student loan the monthly take-home falls to £6,093.

What tax bracket is £135,000 in for 2026/27?

The Personal Allowance of £12,570 is tax-free. You pay 20% basic rate on the first band, 40% higher rate between £50,271 and £125,140, and 45% additional rate on everything above £125,140. Your Personal Allowance is fully tapered away.

What hourly rate does £135,000 work out at?

Assuming a standard 37.5-hour working week and 52 weeks a year, £135,000 gross is approximately £69/hour before tax. After tax and NI with no student loan it's roughly £42/hour net.

Where does £135,000 sit in UK earnings?

£135,000 is approximately at the 50th percentile of UK full-time earnings — meaning you earn more than 50% of UK full-time workers. The UK median full-time salary is £37,430.

Is this enough to get a mortgage?

UK lenders typically offer 4.5× gross annual income (4.0-4.75× depending on lender and credit). £135,000 implies a borrowing capacity of roughly £607,500 on your own, or up to £742,500 for high-earners on specialist lenders. Add your deposit to that figure to get your realistic property price ceiling.

How can I increase my take-home on this salary?

The biggest single lever is pension salary sacrifice — contributing via your employer reduces both your income tax AND your National Insurance. At your income level, pension contributions are especially powerful because they can restore your tapered Personal Allowance and dodge the 60% trap between £100k and £125k. Speak to an FCA-authorised adviser — you'll find qualified IFAs in our directory.

Sources

Advertisement

Editorial Disclaimer

The content on Kaeltripton.com is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial, investment, tax, legal or regulatory advice. Kaeltripton.com is not authorised or regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) and is not a financial adviser, mortgage broker, insurance intermediary or investment firm. Nothing on this site should be construed as a personal recommendation. Rates, figures and product details are indicative only, subject to change without notice, and should always be verified directly with the relevant provider, HMRC, the FCA register, the Bank of England, Ofgem or other appropriate authority before any financial decision is made. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future results. If you require regulated financial advice, please consult a qualified adviser authorised by the FCA.

CT
Chandraketu Tripathi
Finance Editor · Kaeltripton.com
Chandraketu (CK) Tripathi, founder and lead editor of Kael Tripton. 22 years in finance and marketing across 23 markets. Writes on UK personal finance, tax, mortgages, insurance, energy, and investing. Sources: HMRC, FCA, Ofgem, BoE, ONS.

Stay ahead of your money

Free UK finance guides, rate changes and money-saving tips — straight to your inbox. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.

Read More