About a £32,000 Salary in the UK
On a £32,000 gross salary, you'll take home £26,560 per year, which works out to £2,213 per month after income tax and National Insurance.
At this salary, all of your taxable income falls within the basic rate tax band (20%).
Your effective tax rate is 17.0%, meaning you keep 83.0p of every pound earned.
Where Does a £32,000 Salary Sit in the UK?
A gross salary of £32,000 is just shy of the UK median. At roughly the 45th percentile, you are approaching the middle of the earnings distribution. This is a comfortable salary in most of England, Scotland, and Wales, and reflects several years of professional experience or a skilled trade.
With monthly take-home pay of £2,243, understanding where you sit relative to other earners helps you benchmark your career progress and set realistic financial goals. You can explore this further: What can you afford on £32,000? | Is £32,000 a good salary?.
What Can You Afford on £32,000?
Here is a realistic monthly budget for someone taking home £2,243 per month:
One-bed flat in a mid-cost area: £725
Council tax, utilities, broadband, phone: £205
Groceries and dining out: £260
Car or commute costs: £145
ISA contributions: £175
Leisure, holidays, subscriptions: £733
At £32,000 you have a bit more breathing room. You can comfortably cover your own flat in most mid-cost cities and start to build a consistent savings habit. See our full affordability guide for £32,000 and find out how this salary compares.
Jobs That Pay Around £32,000
Typical UK roles at this salary level include:
• Experienced teaching assistant turning HLTA
• Junior accountant (part-qualified ACA/ACCA)
• Mid-level recruitment consultant
• Occupational therapist (Band 5 NHS)
• Network technician
• Project coordinator
At £32,000, most people are 3-5 years into their career. This is often the salary where taking on supervisory responsibilities or completing a professional qualification unlocks the jump to £38,000 and beyond.
How to Maximise Your Take Home on £32,000
Consider a stocks and shares ISA. With your ISA allowance of £20,000 per year, even investing £150 per month can grow substantially over 10-20 years. Read our comparison of pension vs ISA to decide what suits you.
Look into salary sacrifice benefits. Many employers offer cycle to work, extra pension contributions, or tech schemes that reduce your taxable income. Even a small sacrifice can save you hundreds in tax and NI.
Use a budgeting app. Tracking where your money goes at this income level is the single fastest way to find £100+ per month you did not know you could save.
Want to add student loans, pension, or a different salary?
Use our full calculator →