What Percentage of the UK Earns Over £60,000?

Approximately 15% of UK workers earn more than £60,000 per year.

Percentage Earning Over £60,000
15%
of UK workers earn more than this
85% earn less
Gross Salary
£60,000
Take Home Monthly
£3,780
Top %
15%

Is £60,000 a Good Salary?

If you earn £60,000, you earn more than 85% of all UK workers. The UK median salary is approximately £31,000, so £60,000 is above average.

After tax, £60,000 gives you £45,357/year or £3,780/month. See the full breakdown: £60,000 salary after tax.

Other Salary Thresholds

Salary% Earning MoreTake Home/Month
£20,00075%£1,493
£25,00062%£1,793
£30,00052%£2,093
£35,00042%£2,393
£40,00034%£2,693
£45,00028%£2,993
£50,00023%£3,293
£60,00015%£3,780
£70,00011%£4,263
£80,0008%£4,746
£90,0006%£5,230
£100,0004.4%£5,713
£125,0002.5%£6,452
£150,0001.5%£7,554

What It Means to Earn Over £60,000

If you earn more than £60,000 per year, you are in the top 18% of UK earners — meaning you earn more than approximately 82% of all workers. This is a high salary by UK standards, placing you well above the median. Higher-rate tax (40%) applies to much of your income above £50,270. Tax-efficient pension contributions and ISA investments should be priorities at this income level.

UK Salary Distribution

The UK salary distribution is right-skewed, meaning a relatively small number of very high earners pull the average (mean) salary above the median. The median full-time salary is approximately £31,000, while the mean is higher at around £35,000. This means that if you earn £60,000, you are doing better than the simple "average salary" figure might suggest. For your take home pay calculation, see £60,000 salary after tax.

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