£11,000 After Tax
If you earn £11,000 salary per year, you will take home £902 every month after £0 tax, and £15 national insurance is deducted by your employer from your £917 monthly gross salary.
This £902 is the sum that you usually see on your payslip, marked as NET PAY.
(includes student loan, pension contributions, and many more).
Your gross hourly rate will be £5.30 if you are working 40 hours per week.
Because your yearly earnings fall into the tax free income band (which is from £0 to 12,500 a year, or £1,042 a month), you won't pay any tax on your £11,000 salary.
Apart from tax, you'll also have to pay National Insurance. You'll pay £180 National Insurance in the 2020 - 2021 tax year (or £15 per month).
Salary calculations for £11,000 done using the latest official 2020 - 2021 tax rates from HMRC.
Salary
- Gross
- Tax
- NI
- NET
Year
- £11,000
- £0
- £180
- £10,820
Month
- £917
- £0
- £15
- £902
Week
- £212
- £0
- £3
- £208
Hour
- £5.30
- £0.00
- £0.08
- £5.20
Salary
- Gross
- Tax
- NI
- NET
Year
- £11,000
- £0
- £180
- £10,820
Salary
- Gross
- Tax
- NI
- NET
Month
- £917
- £0
- £15
- £902
Extra info regarding your £11,000 salary
Personal allowance
One important fact about your £11,000 yearly salary is that you have a personal allowance of £12,500 this tax year. This means that you won't pay any tax on your salary, as your earnings fall below the yearly personal allowance.
Taxable amount
As you are earning below the personal allowance, your taxable amount will be £0. You'll only start paying tax on the sum that you are earning above the personal allowance.
(includes student loan, pension contributions, benefits-in-kind, dividends, and many more).
Amount liable for NI
As you are earning below the yearly national insurance threshold of £9,500, you won't pay any national insurance on your earnings.