PayMetric Labs
Free · No sign-up · Updated for 2026

Salary Calculator: Ireland & UK Take-Home Pay

Enter any gross salary and instantly see your net take-home pay after all deductions, Income Tax, USC and PRSI for Ireland, or Income Tax and National Insurance for the UK. Full band-by-band breakdown included.

🇮🇪2026 Budget rates

Irish Tax Calculator

Income Tax · USC · PRSI

Calculate your exact net pay in Ireland after Income Tax (20% / 40%), Universal Social Charge (USC), and Pay-Related Social Insurance (PRSI), using 2026 Budget rates, broken down band by band.

What's included

  • Income Tax at 20% and 40% with tax credits
  • USC across all four bands (0.5% to 8%)
  • PRSI at 4.2% (Class A, 2026 rates)
  • Married / one income / two income options
  • Annual, monthly, and weekly take-home

Example: €85K gross → ~€55K take-home

🇬🇧2026/27 HMRC rates

UK PAYE Calculator

Income Tax · National Insurance

Calculate your exact net pay in the UK after Income Tax (20% / 40% / 45%) and Class 1 National Insurance, using 2026/27 HMRC rates, including Personal Allowance tapering above £100,000.

What's included

  • Income Tax at basic, higher, and additional rates
  • Personal Allowance £12,570 (tapers above £100K)
  • Class 1 NI at 8% and 2%
  • England, Wales & Northern Ireland rates
  • Annual, monthly, and weekly take-home

Example: £60K gross → ~£43K take-home

Frequently asked questions

Which countries do your salary calculators cover?

We currently cover Ireland (Income Tax, USC, PRSI. 2026 Budget rates.) and the United Kingdom (Income Tax, National Insurance. 2026/27 HMRC rates for England, Wales, and Northern Ireland). Scottish Income Tax rates differ and are not currently modelled.

Are these calculators free?

Yes, both calculators are completely free with no sign-up required.

How accurate are the results?

Both calculators use the official published rates for their respective tax years. They assume standard PAYE employment with default allowances and credits only, they do not account for pension contributions, BIK, share options, student loans, or other reliefs. For precise tax advice, consult a qualified tax professional or the relevant revenue authority.

What is the difference between gross and net pay?

Gross pay is your salary before any deductions. Net pay (take-home pay) is what lands in your bank account after Income Tax, social insurance contributions (PRSI in Ireland, National Insurance in the UK), and other statutory deductions are removed.

Not sure what salary to enter?

Browse verified salary benchmarks by role and city across Ireland and the UK, then come back to calculate your take-home.