£1550 Day Rate — Inside vs Outside IR35
The figures above assume PAYE employment (or inside IR35) at 2025/26 rates (thresholds frozen to 2028). If you're outside IR35 working through a limited company, you can optimise your tax by taking a small salary plus dividends, potentially saving tens of thousands at this rate. Use our IR35 calculator to compare, or see the dedicated £1550/day inside vs outside IR35 comparison.
Working at £1550/Day
A day rate of £1550 translates to approximately £341,000/year based on 220 working days (allowing for holidays and gaps between contracts). Rates from £1,550 to £1,750 sit in interim C-suite territory. Engagements at this level are usually board-adjacent — interim executives, crisis and turnaround mandates, expert witnesses and specialist advisers — and are often shorter and more outcome-driven than a conventional rolling day-rate contract. As a contractor you also bear costs that permanent employees do not — professional indemnity insurance, accountancy fees, unpaid holidays and pension contributions all come out of the rate.
The Tax Picture at £341,000
On £341,000 of PAYE income you pay £139,653 income tax and £8,831 National Insurance, keeping £192,516 — an effective deduction rate of 43.5%. Every extra pound you bill is taxed at a marginal rate of 47% (45% additional-rate income tax plus 2% NI). The personal allowance disappeared entirely at £125,140 — the notorious 60%+ marginal zone between £100,000 and £125,140 sits far below this income. For perspective, £341,000 is about 9.7 times the UK median full-time salary of roughly £35,000, yet after deductions each of your 220 worked days is worth about £875 in your pocket rather than £1550.
Pension Contributions and the Tapered Allowance
Pension contributions are the single most effective tax lever at this income, with relief at your 47% marginal rate. At £341,000 your adjusted income sits above HMRC's £260,000 taper threshold, so per gov.uk guidance your annual allowance is cut by £1 for every £2 above the line — roughly £19,500 here rather than the standard £60,000 (assuming no other income or pension accrual). Contributions beyond the tapered allowance trigger an annual allowance charge, though carry-forward of unused allowance from the previous three tax years can extend the headroom. If you work outside IR35, employer contributions made directly from your limited company are corporation-tax deductible and never touch the dividend chain, which makes them doubly efficient — but they still count towards adjusted income for the taper.
Permanent Salary Equivalent
When comparing a £1550/day contract to permanent employment, the general rule of thumb is that a day rate needs to be roughly 40-50% higher than the permanent equivalent to account for contractor costs and risks. A £1550/day contractor earns roughly the equivalent of a £221,650 permanent salary once you factor in employer pension contributions, paid holidays, sick pay, and employment benefits that permanent staff receive. See the £1550/day salary equivalent page for the full comparison, or try our contractor vs permanent calculator and umbrella company calculator.
£1550 Day Rate FAQs
What is the annual salary for a £1550 day rate?
A £1550 day rate working 220 days per year equals £341,000 annually. After income tax and National Insurance at 2025/26 rates (thresholds frozen to 2028), take home pay is approximately £192,516/year or £16,043/month on PAYE or inside IR35.
How much is £1550 a day after tax in the UK?
On PAYE or inside IR35, £1550/day across 220 working days leaves about £16,043 a month or £3,702 a week — 56.5% of the £341,000 gross. Outside IR35 through a limited company, retention is typically higher.
What is the marginal tax rate on £341,000 a year?
47% — the 45% additional rate of income tax plus 2% employee National Insurance on every extra pound. The personal allowance is fully withdrawn at this income; it tapers away between £100,000 and £125,140, creating a 60%+ marginal zone that sits well below £341,000.
Is £1550 a day a good rate?
£341,000 a year is about 9.7 times the UK median full-time salary of roughly £35,000, putting it in interim C-suite territory. Remember that contractors fund their own pension, holidays, sick cover and insurances out of the rate.
Earning at this level? Read our guides to the £100k tax trap and tax tips for high earners.
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