Tax on £100,000 bonus: 2026/27
Tax on a £100,000 Bonus UK (2026/27)
How much UK tax + NI you pay on a £100,000 bonus in 2026/27 depends entirely on your base salary. The bonus stacks on top of your existing salary at your marginal rate - there is no special "bonus tax rate". Below: 4 worked examples across base-salary levels (basic-rate, higher-rate, £100k PA-taper zone). A higher-rate earner on £75k base typically loses £49521 of £100,000 to tax + NI (~42% effective), leaving £50479 net.
£100,000 bonus tax at 4 base-salary levels
| Base salary | Bonus IT | Bonus NI | Total tax | Net bonus | Effective rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic-rate (£30k base) Salary £30,000 + bonus £100,000 | £41,217 | £3,216 | £44,433 | £55,567 | 44.4% |
| Just-under-higher (£50k base) Salary £50,000 + bonus £100,000 | £46,217 | £2,016 | £48,233 | £51,767 | 48.2% |
| Higher-rate (£75k base) Salary £75,000 + bonus £100,000 | £47,521 | £2,000 | £49,521 | £50,479 | 49.5% |
| PA-taper zone (£110k base) Salary £110,000 + bonus £100,000 | £47,271 | £2,000 | £49,271 | £50,729 | 49.3% |
Bonus sacrifice into pension - the optimal move
For higher-rate earners, sacrificing all or part of a £100,000 bonus directly into pension is the single most tax-efficient annual move available.
- Arrange BEFORE bonus contractually due (typically 30-day window).
- Income Tax saved: at higher rate £40,000 (40%)
- Employee NI saved: at higher rate £2,000 (2%)
- Employer NI saved (often passed through): £15,000 (15%)
- Total pension contribution if employer passes through ER NI: £115,000 - for £0 cash you'd have received anyway
- "Boost rate" vs cash net (~£58,000): approximately 98% boost on every £1 sacrificed
See our bonus tax 2026/27 worked examples for the full 20-cell matrix across 5 bonus sizes × 4 salary bands.
Frequently asked questions
How much tax do I pay on a £100,000 bonus UK?
Depends entirely on your salary stack. A £100,000 bonus on a £30k base salary (basic-rate stack): roughly £44,433 total tax (IT + NI), leaving £55,567 net. Same £100,000 on £75k higher-rate base: £49,521 total tax, £50,479 net. Same £100,000 on £110k base (£100k PA taper zone): £49,271 tax due to 62% combined marginal rate, £50,729 net. The bonus is taxed at your MARGINAL rate stacked on top of your base salary - there is no special "bonus tax rate" in the UK.
Why does my bonus seem taxed at a higher rate than my salary?
Band-stacking. Your base salary uses the £12,570 Personal Allowance and most/all of the 20% basic-rate band. The bonus sits ABOVE that, entirely in your highest tax band. A higher-rate earner's regular monthly salary has a blended effective rate (some at 20%, some at 40%); the bonus is ALL at 40% + 2% NI = 42%. PAYE cumulative tax-code mechanics can also make the bonus-month payslip look worse than reality - the bonus month catches up tax that would have been spread across the year, then subsequent months show reduced deduction to reconcile.
Can I avoid tax on my £100,000 bonus?
Yes via bonus sacrifice into pension. Arrange BEFORE the bonus becomes contractually due (typically a 30-day window before payment). The sacrificed amount is exempt from Income Tax + employee NI + employer NI. Worked example for higher-rate earner: £100,000 taken as cash = £50,479 net. £100,000 sacrificed into pension = £100,000 pension contribution + up to £15,000 employer NI top-up (if employer passes through) = £115,000 of pension contribution for £0 cash you would have received anyway. "Boost rate" vs cash net: ~95-100%. See our bonus tax worked examples guide for the full mechanics.
Is my bonus subject to National Insurance?
Yes - bonuses are earnings for NI purposes (Section 4 SSCBA 1992). Employee NI 8% on bonus portion within the £12,570-£50,270 band, 2% above £50,270. Employer pays Class 1A NI at 15% (raised from 13.8% April 2025) on the bonus, charged to the company. For most higher-earning employees whose base salary already exceeds £50,270 UEL, the bonus NI rate is 2%. For basic-rate earners with bonus straddling UEL, the bonus splits between 8% and 2% NI portions.
Are share-based or RSU bonuses taxed differently?
Yes - different scheme. RSUs (Restricted Stock Units): taxed as employment income at VESTING, at marginal IT + NI rates on vest-date market value. Subsequent sale: CGT on gain above vest-date base cost. EMI options: government-approved scheme. No IT/NI on grant or exercise (if exercise price ≥ market value at grant). Only CGT on disposal, at potentially BADR 18% rate on first £1m lifetime. Unapproved options: IT + NI on the gain at exercise. SIP / SAYE: government-approved, mostly tax-favoured if held 5 years. Cash bonus follows the income-tax-plus-NI rules covered on this page.
What if my bonus pushes me over £100k?
You enter the Personal Allowance taper zone with a 62% combined marginal rate (40% IT + 20% from PA loss + 2% NI). Worked example: £95k base + £100,000 bonus. If 195000 crosses into the £100k-£125,140 band, the portion in the taper zone is taxed at 62% effective. Worst case for a £100,000 bonus that takes you from £95k → £195,000: up to £3100 of taper-zone tax for the first portion above £100k (your bonus stays below £100k). PLUS HICBC clawback if claiming Child Benefit (£60k threshold) and Tax-Free Childcare £100k cliff. Combined "stacking" of these family-tax cliffs can push effective marginal rates past 100% in worst-case scenarios. See our £100k tax trap calculator.
Related calculators and guides
- Bonus tax 2026/27 worked examples - full 20-cell matrix.
- Bonus tax calculator - interactive tool.
- Bonus sacrifice calculator - interactive sacrifice vs cash.
- Salary sacrifice 2026/27 - monthly sacrifice mechanics.
- Higher-rate tax 40% guide - the £50,270 threshold.
- £100k tax trap - 62% combined zone.
- Max pension contribution calc - £60k AA + carry-forward.
- Personal Allowance £12,570 guide - the band that determines marginal rate.