A pay rise only feels simple at the gross number. The real question is how much of it actually reaches your bank account after tax, National Insurance, pension contributions, and any other deductions that apply to your contract.
Gross pay is not the number you live on
A pay rise is most useful when you know what it means in real terms. If your contract says a raise is worth more, the first step is to estimate the net increase and then decide how much of it should be spent, saved, or routed into pension contributions.
What cuts the increase down?
| Factor | Effect | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Income tax | A slice of the raise is taxed at your marginal rate. | The higher your band, the smaller the net uplift. |
| National Insurance | Additional earnings usually attract NI too. | This is easy to forget when you compare salaries. |
| Pension contribution | If you increase contributions, take-home falls more. | Good for long-term saving, but it changes the net figure. |
| Inflation | Buying power can still fall even if pay rises. | A raise needs to beat inflation to feel bigger. |
How to use a pay rise well
- Ring-fence part of the net increase so lifestyle inflation does not eat the whole win.
- Use some of it to improve the balance sheet, not just the monthly budget.
- Decide in advance whether the next step is debt reduction, savings, or pension planning.
- Re-run the numbers if the raise is tied to a new bonus structure or changed working pattern.
Why pension contributions matter here
A small increase in pension contributions can be a smart way to turn a pay rise into a long-term gain without feeling like the money has disappeared. That is especially true if you want to protect future flexibility while the cost of living is still high.
If you want to see the trade-off in detail, compare the gross raise with Pension Contribution Calculator, Income Tax Calculator and National Insurance Calculator.
Official sources and related reads
- UK tax code guide — helpful when your payslip looks different from the gross figure.
- UK salary sacrifice guide — if your employer lets you redirect the raise before tax.
- GOV.UK: Income Tax introduction — the official overview of taxable income.
- GOV.UK: Income Tax rates — current bands and allowances.
- GOV.UK: estimate Income Tax — the government calculator for current-year tax.