💷 Salary Guide

Budgeting on a £25,000 Salary
in the UK (2026/27)

By earmarkIQ April 2026 5 min read Updated for 2026/27 tax year

Earning £25,000 in the UK? Here's exactly what you take home after tax and National Insurance, a ready-made monthly budget using the 50/30/20 rule, and how long it takes to save for a house deposit at this salary. All figures updated for the 2026/27 tax year.

Quick Answer

On a £25,000 UK salary (2026/27), you take home £1,793.30/month after £2,486.00 income tax and £994.40 National Insurance. Using the 50/30/20 rule: £896.65 for needs, £537.99 for wants, and £358.66 for savings. At that savings rate, a £20,000 house deposit takes approximately 4.7 years.

Your Take-Home Pay on £25,000

Here's the full breakdown of your £25,000 salary after PAYE income tax and National Insurance contributions for the 2026/27 tax year. All taxable income falls within the basic rate (20%) band.

ItemAnnualMonthly
Gross salary£25,000£2,083.33
Income tax-£2,486.00-£207.17
National Insurance-£994.40-£82.87
Net take-home£21,519.60£1,793.30
Note

This calculation uses the standard personal allowance of £12,570, basic rate of 20% (£12,571–£50,270), higher rate of 40% (above £50,270), NI at 8% (£12,570–£50,270) and 2% above. It does not include student loan repayments, pension auto-enrolment, or Scottish tax rates. Your actual take-home may differ — earmarkIQ reads your real payslip data via Open Banking for exact figures.

The 50/30/20 Budget on £1,793.30/Month

The 50/30/20 rule splits your take-home pay into three categories: 50% for needs (rent, bills, groceries, transport), 30% for wants (eating out, subscriptions, hobbies), and 20% for savings and debt repayment. Here's what that looks like on £25,000:

50% Needs: £896.65/mo
30% Wants: £537.99/mo
20% Savings: £358.66/mo
Category% of Take-HomeMonthly AmountExamples
Needs50%£896.65Rent/mortgage, council tax, utilities, groceries, transport, insurance
Wants30%£537.99Eating out, subscriptions, clothing, hobbies, entertainment
Savings20%£358.66Emergency fund, ISA, house deposit, debt overpayments

These amounts are guides — your actual split will depend on where you live and your fixed commitments. Read our complete UK salary budgeting guide for a deeper breakdown of how to adapt these percentages to your situation.

Is £25,000 a Good Salary in the UK?

At £25,000 you earn roughly £7,000 below the UK median salary of £34,963 (ONS 2025). This is a common starting salary for graduates, administrative roles, and junior positions across most UK sectors. You'll take home £1,793 per month — enough to cover essentials in most UK cities outside London, but tight if housing costs exceed 30% of your take-home. Budgeting intentionally at this stage builds habits that compound as your salary grows.

Saving for a House Deposit on £25,000

At the 50/30/20 savings rate of £358.66/month, here's how long it takes to build a house deposit:

£20,000 Deposit
56 months

4.7 years at £358.66/month

£50,000 Deposit
140 months

11.7 years at £358.66/month

A Lifetime ISA is worth considering — you can save up to £4,000/year and the government adds a 25% bonus (£1,000/year) toward your first home or retirement. At your savings rate of £358.66/month, you could max out the LISA annual contribution in approximately 12 months.

These timelines assume consistent savings with no investment returns. Putting savings in a stocks and shares ISA or a high-interest savings account could shorten the timeline — earmarkIQ's marketplace surfaces the best UK savings rates matched to your goals.

How earmarkIQ Helps You Budget on £25,000

On a £25,000 salary, building good financial habits early has an outsized long-term impact. earmarkIQ connects to your bank via Open Banking and uses AI to categorise every transaction automatically. When you get paid, earmarkIQ's salary allocation engine splits your £1,793 take-home into needs, wants, and savings — and can move money to savings accounts via Payment Initiation before you're tempted to spend it. The weekly AI briefing shows exactly where your money went and flags any unusual spending.

Budget smarter on £25,000

earmarkIQ connects to your bank, calculates your real take-home, and allocates your salary automatically on payday. Free to start.

Download earmarkIQ Free

iOS · Free tier available · FCA regulated · Open Banking


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the take-home pay for £25,000 in the UK?
On a £25,000 salary in the UK (2026/27 tax year), you pay £2,486.00 in income tax and £994.40 in National Insurance. Your net take-home pay is £21,519.60 per year, or £1,793.30 per month. This assumes no student loan, standard pension auto-enrolment, and the personal allowance of £12,570. earmarkIQ reads your actual payslip via Open Banking and calculates your real take-home automatically.
Is £25,000 a good salary in the UK?
A £25,000 salary is below the UK median of £34,963 (ONS 2025) but is a common starting salary for graduates and entry-level roles. After tax and National Insurance, you take home £1,793 per month. This is comfortable in lower-cost areas but tight in London, where average rents exceed your entire 50% needs allocation. earmarkIQ's AI salary allocation helps you make the most of every pound by automating your budget on payday.
How much should I save on a £25,000 salary?
On a £25,000 salary with £1,793.30 monthly take-home, the 50/30/20 rule suggests saving £358.66 per month (20% of take-home). This builds a £20,000 house deposit in approximately 56 months (4.7 years). Aim for an emergency fund of 3–6 months' expenses (£2,689.95 to £5,379.90) before investing. earmarkIQ automates this savings allocation on payday via Open Banking Payment Initiation.
What can I afford to spend on rent on £25,000?
On a £25,000 salary, you should aim to spend no more than £538 per month on rent. This is realistic in cities like Sheffield, Nottingham, Liverpool, and many towns across the UK. In London, this budget would only cover a room in a shared house. If your rent exceeds 30% of take-home, reduce your wants allocation to compensate — earmarkIQ can model this adjustment automatically.

About earmarkIQ

earmarkIQ is a UK personal finance app launching on iOS in May 2026. It is an FCA Appointed Representative of Finexer Ltd (FRN 925695) and ICO registered (CSN2001882). earmarkIQ provides Open Banking account aggregation across 50+ UK banks via Finexer, AI-powered salary allocation, Payment Initiation Services (PIS), subscription price creep detection, capital gains tracking, salary sacrifice optimisation, marriage allowance detection, and a financial product marketplace. The AI financial advisor, Ask IQ, is powered by Claude (Anthropic). Subscription tiers: Free (£0), Plus (£4.99/mo), Pro (£9.99/mo), Unlimited (£14.99/mo). Website: earmarkiq.app


Explore other salary guides: £22,000 Salary · £27,500 Salary · £30,000 Salary

Related reading: How to Budget Your Salary UK · Best Budgeting Apps UK 2026 · Moneyhub Alternative UK