UK Income Tax Rates 2021/22 Calculator
Estimate your annual and monthly take-home pay using 2021/22 income tax, National Insurance, and student loan thresholds.
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Enter your details and click Calculate.
Expert Guide to the UK Income Tax Rates 2021/22 Calculator
If you are searching for a reliable way to estimate your take-home pay for the 2021/22 tax year, this UK income tax rates 2021/22 calculator is designed to give you a practical, clear, and professional breakdown. It is especially useful if you are comparing job offers, reviewing your payroll deductions, planning pension contributions, or checking if your monthly payslip looks accurate.
Many people know their gross salary but do not always understand how each deduction is calculated. Your final net pay is shaped by several layers: personal allowance rules, tax bands, National Insurance thresholds, student loan repayments, and pension salary sacrifice arrangements. A high-quality calculator helps you see all of those components at once so you can make better financial decisions with confidence.
What this calculator includes for 2021/22
- Income tax calculations using 2021/22 band structures for England, Wales, Northern Ireland, and Scotland.
- Personal allowance handling, including reduction above £100,000 and optional no-allowance mode.
- Class 1 employee National Insurance for the 2021/22 annual thresholds.
- Student loan deductions for Plan 1, Plan 2, Plan 4, and Postgraduate Loan.
- A visual chart showing how your gross income is divided between take-home pay and deductions.
2021/22 income tax rates at a glance
The UK tax system is progressive. This means each slice of taxable income is taxed at its corresponding rate, rather than one single rate applying to all income. For England, Wales, and Northern Ireland, the 2021/22 structure included a 20% basic rate, 40% higher rate, and 45% additional rate. Scotland used five non-savings, non-dividend bands for earnings, with starter, basic, intermediate, higher, and top rates.
| Region and band (2021/22) | Threshold basis | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| England/Wales/NI Basic Rate | Taxable income up to £37,700 | 20% |
| England/Wales/NI Higher Rate | Over £37,700 taxable income up to additional threshold | 40% |
| England/Wales/NI Additional Rate | Income above £150,000 (pre-2023 threshold framework) | 45% |
| Scotland Starter Rate | First £2,097 of taxable income | 19% |
| Scotland Basic Rate | Next £10,629 of taxable income | 20% |
| Scotland Intermediate Rate | Next £18,366 of taxable income | 21% |
| Scotland Higher and Top Rates | Higher slices above intermediate band, then top rate over £150,000 total income | 41% and 46% |
A critical point is that the personal allowance was generally £12,570 for 2021/22. If adjusted net income exceeded £100,000, that allowance reduced by £1 for every £2 over the threshold. At around £125,140, the allowance could be fully removed, which sharply increases the effective marginal tax burden in that range.
National Insurance and student loan thresholds
Income tax is only one part of payroll deductions. National Insurance can be substantial, especially around the main earnings range. Student loan repayments can also materially reduce monthly take-home pay. The table below captures common 2021/22 annual thresholds used in this calculator.
| Deduction type (2021/22) | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Employee NI Primary Threshold | Above £9,568 annual | 12% up to UEL |
| Employee NI Upper Earnings Limit | Above £50,270 annual | 2% above UEL |
| Student Loan Plan 1 | Above £19,895 annual | 9% |
| Student Loan Plan 2 | Above £27,295 annual | 9% |
| Student Loan Plan 4 | Above £25,000 annual | 9% |
| Postgraduate Loan | Above £21,000 annual | 6% |
How to use this UK income tax rates 2021/22 calculator effectively
- Enter your annual gross salary from your contract or payroll records.
- Add any recurring taxable bonus or extra income paid through payroll.
- Input annual salary sacrifice pension contributions if applicable.
- Select your tax region carefully, as Scotland uses different income tax bands.
- Choose the student loan type that applies to your loan agreement.
- Click Calculate and review annual and monthly values side by side.
For salary sacrifice users, this calculator treats pension deductions as reducing taxable and NI-able pay before tax calculations. This mirrors common payroll handling for sacrifice arrangements and often demonstrates one reason salary sacrifice can improve tax efficiency compared with post-tax pension funding.
What your result means in practical terms
Once calculated, focus on the net annual and net monthly amounts first. These are typically your decision figures for affordability, mortgage planning, and savings targets. Then review the deduction lines. If tax looks much higher than expected, check whether your personal allowance has tapered away, your bonus pushed income into a higher band, or your tax code setting removed the allowance.
If NI appears larger than expected, remember NI has separate thresholds and rates from income tax. It is normal for NI and income tax to diverge as income rises. Student loan repayments also increase linearly above each plan threshold, which can make the real difference between gross pay rises and net pay rises feel smaller than expected.
Common mistakes when estimating 2021/22 take-home pay
- Using monthly calculators without understanding annualized thresholds.
- Mixing tax year rules from 2021/22 with newer years.
- Forgetting that Scotland has separate bands for earned income.
- Ignoring the personal allowance taper above £100,000.
- Not accounting for student loans when comparing job offers.
- Assuming pension contributions always reduce NI, when method matters.
Another frequent issue is comparing an old payslip to the wrong tax year assumptions. Even small threshold changes between tax years can create noticeable monthly differences. If your goal is precision for payroll audit, always match the exact tax year, pay frequency, pension arrangement, and tax code details.
Why this matters for financial planning
Tax efficiency is not only for high earners. For many households, understanding deductions can unlock practical strategies: setting pension contribution levels, choosing bonus timing, evaluating salary sacrifice, and planning emergency funds with realistic net income numbers. If you are at or near a threshold, a small adjustment may have a meaningful impact on your effective marginal rate.
For example, individuals around the £100,000 to £125,140 range often face significantly reduced net benefit from additional income because the personal allowance is withdrawn. Calculating this properly can guide smarter choices around pension contributions or adjusted compensation structures where available.
Authoritative sources for tax-year validation
For official validation and deeper technical detail, review:
GOV.UK: Income Tax rates and Personal Allowances
GOV.UK: National Insurance rates and categories
GOV.UK: Employer rates and thresholds for 2021 to 2022
This calculator is an educational estimation tool for the 2021/22 tax year. Actual payroll outcomes may vary due to pay period settings, benefits in kind, tax code adjustments, relief methods, and employer-specific processing.