£150,000 in Context
According to HMRC's Income Tax liabilities statistics (Table 2.5, 2025/26 projections), only around 2.1% of UK income taxpayers have income above £150,000. The median UK taxpayer income was £29,700 in 2023/24, and the ONS median full-time salary was £39,039 in April 2025 — so £150,000 is roughly 3.8 times what the typical full-time employee earns.
On a salary of £150,000, at 2025/26 rates (thresholds frozen to 2028), income tax takes £53,703 and National Insurance £5,011, leaving £91,286 a year or £7,607 a month.
What £150,000 Really Means
£150,000 puts you in the top 2% of UK income taxpayers: HMRC's 2025/26 projections count about 835,000 people — 2.1% of 39.1 million taxpayers — with income above this level. It is nearly four times the ONS median full-time salary. Typical earners include medical consultants with private practice, GP partners, salaried partners in professional services and senior technology leaders. With the personal allowance long gone, effective planning shifts to pension annual-allowance management, ISAs and (for couples) balancing income between spouses.
How £150,000 Compares
| Salary | Take Home/Month | % of taxpayers earning more |
|---|---|---|
| £130,000 | £6,724 | Top 2.5% |
| £140,000 | £7,166 | Top 2.2% |
| £150,000 | £7,607 | Top 2.1% |
| £160,000 | £8,049 | Top 1.9% |
| £175,000 | £8,711 | Top 1.6% |
Percentile shares from HMRC data: Survey of Personal Incomes percentile points (2023/24) below £150,000, Income Tax liabilities statistics Table 2.5 (2025/26 projections) above. Take-home at 2025/26 rates, no pension or student loan.
The Tax Picture at £150,000
Above £125,140 the personal allowance is fully withdrawn and every additional pound is taxed at the 45% additional rate plus 2% National Insurance — a 47% marginal rate. Read more in our guides to the £100k tax trap and tax planning for high earners.
Who Earns £150,000?
Typical roles include GP partners, consultants with private practice, tech senior staff engineers, finance MDs outside London, mid-law equity partners. Total reward at this level often adds bonuses, equity or profit share on top of base salary.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is £150,000 a good salary in the UK?
Yes — £150,000 is an exceptional UK salary. Roughly 2.1% of UK income taxpayers earn more, based on HMRC data, and it is about 3.8 times the ONS median full-time salary of £39,039. After tax you take home £91,286 a year (£7,607/month).
How much is £150,000 after tax?
On £150,000 in 2025/26 you take home £91,286 a year or £7,607 a month, after £53,703 income tax and £5,011 National Insurance (no pension or student loan).
What is the marginal tax rate on £150,000?
47% — above £125,140 the personal allowance is fully withdrawn and extra income pays the 45% additional rate plus 2% National Insurance.
What jobs pay £150,000 in the UK?
Typical roles include GP partners, consultants with private practice, tech senior staff engineers, finance MDs outside London, mid-law equity partners.
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