Buying power · 2026/27

What £30,000 Actually Buys You

A £30,000 UK salary works out to £25,120/year take-home after Income Tax + NI (England, no pension). Here is what that money can buy.

Your annual take-home in real items

If you spent all of your £25,120 annual take-home on just one of these items, how many could you afford?

Item Unit price How many per year?
Netflix standard subscription (/month) £11 2,285
Pint of beer in a pub (pint) £5 5,158
iPhone 16 (128GB) (1 unit) £799 31
Cinema ticket (standard adult) £10 2,537
Standard gym membership (/year) £480 52
London 2-bed rent (/month) £2,100 11
Manchester 2-bed rent (/month) £1,200 20
Weekly family food shop (basket) £108 232
BBC TV Licence (/year) £170 148
Litre of petrol (1 litre) £1 17,323

Illustrative only — based on UK average prices as of 2026/27. Obviously nobody spends all their income on one thing.

What £30,000 means tax-wise

Close to the UK median full-time salary of £37,430. Buying power here depends heavily on region — a single earner on £30k does very different things in Belfast vs Bristol.

See the full take-home breakdown for £30,000 →

Where £30,000 sits in the UK

This salary places you in the bottom 31% of UK full-time earners (ONS ASHE 2024 percentile estimate). Typical roles at this salary level include NHS Band 5 (nurse, physio), junior developer, HR advisor, Civil Service EO.

In real terms, £30,000 today has the CPI-adjusted purchasing power of approximately £18,295 in 2010 — UK inflation has eroded the pound by roughly 38% since then. See salary vs inflation for £30,000 for a detailed historical breakdown.

Frequently asked questions

Is £30,000 a good UK salary?
£30,000 sits in the bottom 31% of UK full-time earners (ONS ASHE 2024 percentile estimate). It is below the UK median of £37,430. Typical roles at this level include NHS Band 5 (nurse, physio), junior developer, HR advisor.
What is the take-home on £30,000?
Before pension, for 2026/27 England/Wales/NI: £25,120/year gross take-home, or £2,093/month. Income Tax is £3,486 and National Insurance £1,394 — use the salary calculator to model pension and region variants.
How does £30,000 compare to 2010 in real terms?
£30,000 today has roughly the same purchasing power as £18,295 in 2010 (ONS CPI D7BT adjustment). UK salaries have broadly tracked CPI at the median over that period, though regions and sectors vary widely.

See also: basket of goods over time, salary vs inflation, UK cost of living by city.