About a £480,000 Salary in the UK
On a £480,000 gross salary, you’ll take home £266,186 per year, which works out to £22,182 per month after income tax and National Insurance.
At this level £354,860 of your income falls into the 45% additional-rate band, and the personal allowance — worth £12,570 to most workers — has been fully tapered away to £0.
Your effective tax rate is 44.5%, meaning you keep 55.5p of every pound earned across the whole salary. All figures are calculated on 2025/26 rates and thresholds (thresholds frozen to 2028), so they apply unchanged for 2026/27.
Your Marginal Rate at £480,000
The marginal rate on your next pound is 47% — 45% additional-rate income tax plus 2% employee National Insurance. A £1,000 pay rise therefore adds just £530 to your take home pay.
You are past the notorious £100k tax trap: between £100,000 and £125,140 the personal allowance taper pushes the effective marginal rate to 62%, but at £480,000 the allowance is already fully withdrawn, so the taper no longer distorts your incentives. What matters instead is the flat 47% cost of every marginal pound — and, equally, the flat 47% saving on every pound you can shelter.
How £480,000 Compares to UK Earnings
A £480,000 salary is about 12.3 times the UK median full-time wage — median gross annual pay for full-time employees was £39,039 in April 2025, according to ONS ASHE data. Against all taxpayers the gap is wider still: HMRC percentile data puts the median taxpayer’s total income at £28,400 (2022/23).
On percentiles, a salary of £480,000 on its own puts you above the top 1% threshold — HMRC’s Survey of Personal Incomes puts the 99th percentile of total income before tax at £201,000 for 2022/23, the latest published year.
Salaries around £480,000 are typically advertised or earned by FTSE C-suite executives, Magic Circle equity partners, hedge fund and private equity professionals, top barristers (KCs) in commercial sets, and founders paying themselves a full commercial salary. At this level pay is rarely just base salary — bonuses, carried interest, LTIPs and equity all have their own tax treatment, which makes annual planning with an adviser worthwhile.
Pension and Salary Sacrifice at £480,000
The pension annual allowance taper bites at this income. The standard £60,000 allowance tapers away above £260,000 of adjusted income — your adjusted income is far enough above £360,000 that the allowance is cut to the £10,000 minimum. Carry-forward of unused allowance from the previous three years can still help, and relief is worth 47p per £1 contributed within your limits. Beyond pensions, many earners at this level layer VCTs (30% income tax relief on up to £200,000 invested per year) and EIS. Professional advice pays for itself many times over here — see our high earner tax tips and pension calculator.
£480,000 Salary FAQs
What is the take home pay on a £480,000 salary in the UK?
On a £480,000 salary in the UK for 2026/27, your take home pay is approximately £266,186 per year or £22,182 per month after income tax and National Insurance. Figures use 2025/26 rates and thresholds, which are frozen to 2028.
How much tax do I pay on a £480,000 salary?
You pay £202,203 income tax and £11,611 employee National Insurance — £213,814 in total deductions, an effective rate of 44.5%.
What is the marginal tax rate on £480,000?
The marginal rate is 47%: 45% additional-rate income tax plus 2% National Insurance on every extra pound. Your personal allowance is already fully withdrawn above £125,140.
Is £480,000 a top 1% salary in the UK?
Yes — a salary of £480,000 on its own puts you above the top 1% threshold — HMRC’s Survey of Personal Incomes puts the 99th percentile of total income before tax at £201,000 for 2022/23, the latest published year.
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