Your Bonus at Different Salary Levels
| Base Salary | You Keep from £5,000 | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|
| £30,000 | £3,600 | 28% |
| £40,000 | £3,600 | 28% |
| £50,000 | £2,937 | 41% |
| £60,000 | £2,900 | 42% |
| £80,000 | £2,900 | 42% |
| £100,000 | £1,900 | 62% |
Why does salary matter? Your bonus is taxed at your marginal rate — the rate on your next pound of income. If your salary is £35,000 (basic rate), the bonus is taxed at 28% (20% tax + 8% NI). If your salary is already £55,000 (higher rate), the bonus is taxed at 42% (40% tax + 2% NI).
Important: Your bonus isn't taxed at a special "bonus tax rate." PAYE may over-deduct in the month you receive it, but this corrects automatically in subsequent months. See our bonus tax calculator for exact figures.
How Your £5,000 Bonus Is Taxed
In the UK, bonuses are taxed as part of your regular income — there is no special "bonus tax" rate. Your £5,000 bonus is added to your salary for the pay period in which it is received, and income tax and National Insurance are deducted at your marginal rate. This can result in a higher deduction than expected if the bonus pushes you into a higher tax band for that month.
Why Bonus Tax Looks High
Many people are surprised by how much tax is deducted from their bonus. This happens because PAYE calculates tax as if you will receive the same total (salary + bonus) every month. If your annual salary plus bonus pushes you above the higher-rate threshold (£50,270), the portion above this level is taxed at 40%. Your employer may also deduct emergency-rate tax if the bonus is processed separately. If too much tax is taken, it is usually corrected automatically in subsequent pay periods within the same tax year.
How to Reduce Tax on Your Bonus
There are two main strategies to keep more of your bonus:
1. Pension contributions via salary sacrifice
Ask your employer to redirect your bonus into your pension before tax is applied. This avoids both income tax and National Insurance. On a £5,000 bonus as a basic-rate taxpayer, you save £1,400 in tax and NI — meaning the full £5,000 goes into your pension instead of just £3,600 reaching your bank account. See our salary sacrifice calculator for exact savings.
2. Personal pension contributions
If salary sacrifice is not available, you can make a personal pension contribution and claim tax relief. A £5,000 contribution only costs you £4,000 (the provider claims 20% basic rate automatically). Higher-rate taxpayers can claim a further 20% through their tax return. You still pay NI on the bonus, but the income tax saving is significant.
For more on how tax bands affect your bonus, see our UK tax bands guide. You can also compare with a £2,000 bonus, £10,000 bonus, or £25,000 bonus.