Financial services remains one of the UK's highest-paying sectors, particularly in the City of London and Canary Wharf. Bonuses (not included below) can significantly increase total compensation, especially in investment banking where they can equal or exceed base salary.
Salary Table
| Role | Average Salary | Take Home/Month |
|---|---|---|
| Graduate Analyst (Big 4) | £30,000 | £2,093 |
| Qualified Accountant (ACA/ACCA) | £45,000 | £2,993 |
| Senior Accountant | £55,000 | £3,538 |
| Finance Manager | £60,000 | £3,780 |
| Financial Controller | £75,000 | £4,505 |
| CFO (SME) | £100,000 | £5,713 |
| IB Analyst (Year 1) | £55,000 | £3,538 |
| IB Associate | £80,000 | £4,746 |
| IB Vice President | £120,000 | £6,325 |
| IB Director/MD | £180,000 | £8,879 |
| Financial Adviser (IFA) | £50,000 | £3,293 |
| Fund Manager | £85,000 | £4,988 |
| Actuary (qualified) | £60,000 | £3,780 |
| Senior Actuary | £90,000 | £5,230 |
| Insurance Underwriter | £45,000 | £2,993 |
| Fintech Developer | £60,000 | £3,780 |
| Quantitative Analyst | £80,000 | £4,746 |
| Risk Manager | £65,000 | £4,021 |
Bonuses
In investment banking, bonuses typically range from 50-100% of base salary for analysts/associates, and can be 100-200%+ for senior roles. At the VP/Director level, total compensation can be 2-3x base salary. The figures above show base salary only.
Big 4 Progression
The Big 4 (Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG) have a well-defined pay progression: Graduate (£30-35k), Senior Associate (£40-50k), Manager (£55-70k), Senior Manager (£75-95k), Director (£100-130k), Partner (£250k-£1M+).
Finance Sector Pay Structure
UK finance salaries vary enormously depending on the sub-sector and location. Investment banking analysts in London start at £55,000-65,000 base salary, but total compensation including bonuses can reach £100,000+ in the first year. At the associate and VP level, total packages of £150,000-300,000 are common. However, these figures come with 70-80 hour working weeks — the effective hourly rate is often comparable to other professional roles.
Accounting and audit offer more predictable hours and progression. Newly qualified accountants (ACA/ACCA) typically earn £35,000-45,000, rising to £60,000-80,000 at manager level and £100,000+ for partners at major firms. The Big Four accounting firms remain the most common entry point, with training contracts that pay £25,000-30,000 while you qualify. Financial planning and wealth management roles offer £30,000-50,000 base with commission structures that can significantly increase earnings.
Higher earners in finance face the 40% tax rate on income above £50,270 and the 45% additional rate above £125,140. Bonus tax can feel punishing — a £20,000 bonus may net only £11,200 after tax and NI. See our bonus tax calculator and accountant salary breakdown for specific figures.
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