Accountant Salary in the UK
Qualified accountants (ACA, ACCA, CIMA) typically earn £40,000-£60,000. Senior accountants and finance managers earn £50,000-£80,000. Finance directors can earn £100,000+.
On the average accountant salary of £45,000, you'll take home £35,920 per year or £2,993 per month after income tax and National Insurance.
Career Progression for Accountants
Accountants in the UK can expect significant salary variation based on experience and specialisation. Entry-level roles start around £22,000, rising to £35,000 at mid-career level. Senior accountants earn around £60,000, with top earners (Finance director / Partner) reaching £150,000+.
Qualifications and Entry Requirements
ACA (ICAEW), ACCA, or CIMA qualification. Training contracts typically take 3 years. A relevant degree can provide exemptions from some exams.
Job Demand and Outlook
Consistent demand across all sectors. Forensic accounting, tax advisory, and ESG reporting are growing specialisms. The Big Four firms offer structured career paths with competitive starting salaries.
Career Path and Progression
Trainee to newly qualified (3+ years), then manager (5+ years), senior manager, director, and partner. In-house finance roles follow a similar trajectory: financial accountant, finance manager, financial controller, FD/CFO. Moving in-house after qualifying is a common route to better work-life balance.
Accountant Salary by Experience
Here is what accountants in the UK earn at each career stage, along with approximate monthly take home pay after tax and National Insurance:
| Level | Gross Salary | Take Home/Month |
|---|---|---|
| Trainee | £22,000 | £1,588 |
| Newly Qualified | £35,000 | £2,393 |
| Senior Accountant | £50,000 | £3,310 |
| Manager | £60,000 | £3,910 |
| Partner / Director | £80,000+ | £4,688+ |
Accountant Salary by Sector
Where you work matters as much as your experience level. Here is how accountant salaries compare across different sectors in the UK:
Big 4 firms (Deloitte, PwC, EY, KPMG) offer structured training with starting salaries of £22,000-£28,000 for trainees, rising to £35,000-£50,000 once qualified. Managers earn £55,000-£75,000 and directors £80,000-£150,000+. The trade-off is longer hours and a demanding work culture.
Mid-tier firms (BDO, Grant Thornton, RSM) pay slightly less than the Big 4 but offer a better work-life balance. Qualified accountants earn £32,000-£45,000, with managers reaching £50,000-£65,000.
Industry / In-house roles in commercial businesses pay well with more predictable hours. Financial accountants earn £35,000-£50,000, finance managers £50,000-£70,000, and financial controllers £65,000-£90,000.
Public sector roles in government, NHS, and local authorities typically pay £28,000-£55,000. While salaries are lower, the benefits include a generous pension, more annual leave, and better job security.
Tax Tips for Accountants
Accountants often receive study support worth £10,000-£15,000 during training. Once qualified, salaries jump significantly. Consider the £35k vs £45k comparison to see the impact of qualification.
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