Estimate UK Income Tax across the Personal Allowance and the basic/higher/additional bands (rUK or Scottish rates).
Données vérifiées · May 2026
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Computes UK Income Tax for 2025/26 on employment, self-employment and pension income after the Personal Allowance, applying either the rest-of-UK bands (20/40/45%) or the Scottish bands.
On £60,000 of employment income (rest-of-UK, 2025/26): the first £12,570 is tax-free, £37,700 is taxed at 20% (£7,540) and £9,730 at 40% (£3,892) = £11,432 Income Tax.
Enter gross taxable income.
Adjust the Personal Allowance if it differs from £12,570.
Select Scottish rates if the taxpayer is a Scottish resident.
Read the total Income Tax, effective and marginal rates.
Last data update
May 21, 2026
Sources and references
HMRC Income Tax rates (gov.uk/income-tax-rates); Income Tax Act 2007 s 10; Scottish Budget 2024.
The data in this calculator is updated regularly to reflect the latest official rates. When in doubt, consult the official sources listed above.
Outside Scotland: 20% basic rate, 40% higher rate (on taxable income above £37,700) and 45% additional rate (above £125,140). The first £12,570 is normally tax-free.
£12,570 of tax-free income. It is reduced by £1 for every £2 of income above £100,000 and is fully withdrawn at £125,140.
Yes. Scotland sets its own bands, with six rates and a top rate of 48%. Select the Scottish option to apply them.
Dividend and savings income follow separate rates and allowances — use the dedicated dividend and savings calculators rather than this one.