Glasgow salary quick facts
| City income tax | 0% (UK has no city/regional income tax) |
|---|---|
| Scotland income tax | 19% – 48% (6 bands) |
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 (UK-wide) |
| £100k taper | PA lost £1 per £2 over £100k, gone at £125,140 |
| NIC (employee) | 8% (£12,570 – £50,270) / 2% above |
| VAT | 20% standard rate |
| Pension auto-enrolment | 5% employee / 3% employer minimum on qualifying earnings |
About Glasgow
Glasgow is Scotland's largest city. Economically diverse with strong financial services, life sciences, and creative industries. Cost of living among the lowest of major UK cities. Scotland's income tax bands apply.
UK income tax (FY 2025-26)
The UK tax year runs 6 April to 5 April. Income tax is set by Westminster for England, Wales, and Northern Ireland (rUK) but separately by the Scottish Parliament for Scotland — giving two parallel rate structures.
Bands for England, Wales, and Northern Ireland
| Income | Rate |
|---|---|
| £0 – £12,570 (Personal Allowance) | 0% |
| £12,571 – £50,270 (Basic rate) | 20% |
| £50,271 – £125,140 (Higher rate) | 40% |
| £125,141+ (Additional rate) | 45% |
Bands for Scotland
| Income | Rate |
|---|---|
| £0 – £12,570 (Personal Allowance) | 0% |
| £12,571 – £15,397 (Starter) | 19% |
| £15,398 – £27,491 (Basic) | 20% |
| £27,492 – £43,662 (Intermediate) | 21% |
| £43,663 – £75,000 (Higher) | 42% |
| £75,001 – £125,140 (Advanced) | 45% |
| £125,141+ (Top) | 48% |
The 60% marginal rate trap (£100k–£125,140)
Your Personal Allowance is reduced by £1 for every £2 of income above £100,000, and fully lost at £125,140. Within this band, you pay 40% on each extra £1 PLUS 40% on the £0.50 of PA you just lost — an effective marginal rate of 60% (62% including 2% NIC). In Scotland it's 63% (or 65% with NIC). Pension salary sacrifice is the standard way to push income below the £100k threshold and recover the lost PA.
National Insurance (Class 1 employee)
NIC was restructured in 2024 — the main rate dropped from 12% to 8%. Current rates for FY 2025-26:
- Below £12,570: 0% (Primary Threshold matches PA)
- £12,571 – £50,270: 8% (main rate)
- Above £50,270: 2% (Upper Earnings Limit)
Workplace pension auto-enrolment
Most employed workers are auto-enrolled into a workplace pension. Statutory minimum contributions:
- Employee: 5% of qualifying earnings
- Employer: 3% of qualifying earnings
- Combined: 8% (legally mandated minimum)
"Qualifying earnings" = salary between £6,240 and £50,270 (FY 2025-26 thresholds). Employee contributions usually reduce taxable income ("net pay arrangement"), saving income tax at your marginal rate.
Student loan repayments
The UK has five student loan plans. All charge a flat marginal rate above their threshold:
| Plan | Threshold | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Plan 1 (pre-2012 England/Wales; all NI) | £26,065 | 9% |
| Plan 2 (Sept 2012 – July 2023 E/W) | £28,470 | 9% |
| Plan 4 (Scotland) | £32,745 | 9% |
| Plan 5 (Aug 2023+ England) | £25,000 | 9% |
| Postgraduate | £21,000 | 6% |
Repayments are deducted via PAYE alongside income tax + NIC. Multiple loans (e.g., undergraduate + postgraduate) repay separately.
VAT
Standard rate: 20%. Reduced rate (5%) on some categories like domestic fuel; zero rate (0%) on most food, books, children's clothing.
Sources
- GOV.UK — Income tax rates and allowances
- GOV.SCOT — Scottish income tax rates and bands
- HMRC — Rates and thresholds for employers 2025-26
- GOV.UK — Student loan repayment plans
- The Pensions Regulator — Workplace pension auto-enrolment
Calculator is provided for estimation only and does not constitute tax advice. Consult an accountant or HMRC for filing.
Related tools
- UK Salary Calculator — with city/region picker
- UK Income Tax Calculator
- UK Student Loan Calculator
- UK VAT Calculator