PayMetric Labs
Scottish tax 2026/27 · 6 bandsScotland vs England comparison includedPension salary sacrifice supported

Scottish Income Tax Calculator

Find out your exact take-home pay in Scotland. Enter any gross salary and see your Scottish Income Tax calculated across all six bands, plus a side-by-side comparison showing exactly how much more or less you pay versus England and Wales.

19%

Starter

to £16,537

20%

Basic

to £29,526

21%

Intermediate

to £43,662

42%

Higher

to £75,000

45%

Advanced

to £125,140

48%

Top

above £125,140

Enter your gross salary

£
%

Common salaries:

Annual take-home pay (Scotland)

£43,607

Per month

£3,634

Per week

£839

Effective tax rate

27.3%

Scotland vs England / Wales income tax

Scotland income tax

£13,182

England / Wales income tax

£11,432

Annual difference

+£1,750 more in Scotland

NI is identical in both regions (not devolved). The difference above is income tax only. Earners below approximately £33,500 pay slightly less income tax in Scotland due to the 19% starter rate; above that threshold Scotland becomes progressively more expensive.

How your £60,000 is split

Take-home

£43,607

72.7%

Income Tax

£13,182

22.0%

Nat. Insurance

£3,211

5.4%

Gross salary£60,000
Personal Allowance (tax-free)£12,570
Scottish Income Tax-£13,182
National Insurance (Class 1)-£3,211
Total deductions-£16,393
Net take-home (annual)£43,607

Uses Scottish Income Tax rates for 2026/27 (Scottish Government Budget, December 2025). National Insurance uses UK-wide 2026/27 rates. Assumes PAYE employment with standard Personal Allowance (tapering above £100,000). Pension figure assumes salary sacrifice (reduces taxable income and NI base). Does not account for student loan repayments, Gift Aid, Marriage Allowance, or other reliefs. For precise advice consult a tax professional or Revenue Scotland.

Frequently asked questions

1

What are the Scottish income tax rates for 2026/27?

Scotland has six income tax bands for 2026/27:

Starter rate (19%) on income from £12,571 to £16,537. Scottish basic rate (20%) on income from £16,538 to £29,526. Intermediate rate (21%) on income from £29,527 to £43,662. Higher rate (42%) on income from £43,663 to £75,000. Advanced rate (45%) on income from £75,001 to £125,140. Top rate (48%) on income above £125,140.

The Personal Allowance of £12,570 is tax-free and is the same as the rest of the UK. It tapers by £1 for every £2 earned above £100,000, creating a 67.5% effective marginal tax rate in that zone.

2

Why is income tax higher in Scotland than England?

Income tax in Scotland is partially devolved to the Scottish Parliament, which sets its own rates and bands independently of Westminster. The Scottish Government has chosen a more redistributive structure: six bands versus England's three, a higher rate of 42% (versus 40% in England) that also applies from a lower threshold (£43,662 versus £50,270 in England), and an advanced rate of 45% before the top rate of 48% kicks in.

The additional revenue funds policy choices unique to Scotland, including no tuition fees for Scottish university students and certain free prescription and social care provisions. National Insurance remains a reserved UK-wide policy and is identical across all four nations.

3

How much less do I take home in Scotland compared to England on the same salary?

The difference depends on your salary. Below approximately £33,500 gross, Scottish taxpayers actually pay slightly less income tax than England and Wales, because the 19% starter rate covers a wider slice of income than England's 20% basic rate on the same range. Above £33,500, the 21% intermediate rate makes Scotland progressively more expensive.

For a £60,000 gross salary: Scotland nets approximately £43,607 versus £45,357 in England and Wales, a difference of around £1,750 per year. For £80,000 gross: Scotland nets approximately £55,000 versus £57,200 in England, a difference of around £2,200 per year. The calculator on this page shows the exact comparison for any salary you enter.

4

Do I pay Scottish income tax if my employer is based in London?

Yes. Scottish income tax is determined by where you live, not where your employer's payroll office is located. If your main home is in Scotland, you are a Scottish taxpayer and pay Scottish income tax rates, regardless of whether your employer is based in London, Dublin, or anywhere else.

Your employer should apply the Scottish tax code prefix 'S' to your PAYE code (for example S1257L for the standard personal allowance). If your employer is applying the wrong code, you should contact HMRC to correct it, as using the wrong code will result in either overpaying or underpaying tax.

5

Is National Insurance different in Scotland?

No. National Insurance is a UK-wide policy and is not devolved to Scotland. Employee Class 1 NI is identical across Scotland, England, Wales, and Northern Ireland: 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, and 2% on earnings above £50,270. Only Income Tax differs between Scotland and the rest of the UK.

6

What is the marginal tax rate in Scotland above £100,000?

Above £100,000, the Personal Allowance tapers at £1 for every £2 of additional income, creating a very high effective marginal rate. In Scotland, where the underlying rate in this range is the advanced rate of 45%, the effective marginal income tax rate is 45% plus 22.5% on the lost allowance (45% times 0.5), giving 67.5%. Add 2% NI and the total effective marginal rate is 69.5p taken from every additional £1 earned between £100,000 and £125,140.

This compares to 60% in England and Wales (40% higher rate plus the taper effect). Pension salary sacrifice contributions reduce your adjusted net income and can eliminate this trap if they bring your income below £100,000.

7

What is the Scottish starter rate and does it save tax?

The Scottish starter rate of 19% applies on income from £12,571 to £16,537 in 2026/27. In England and Wales, this same income band is taxed at the basic rate of 20%. So Scottish taxpayers save 1% on up to £3,967 of income, a saving of up to approximately £40 per year.

However, from £29,527 the Scottish intermediate rate of 21% applies (versus England's 20%), and from £43,663 the 42% higher rate applies far earlier than England's 40% higher rate threshold of £50,271. For incomes above approximately £33,500, the cumulative difference reverses and Scottish taxpayers pay more overall.

8

Is this calculator accurate for Edinburgh and Glasgow residents?

Yes. Scottish Income Tax applies to anyone who is a Scottish taxpayer, which generally means your main place of residence is in Scotland. This applies whether you live in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Dundee, Inverness, or anywhere else in Scotland. The Scottish tax rates apply regardless of where your employer is based or where you travel to work.

2026/27 Scottish Income Tax reference table

Rates set by the Scottish Government (Scottish Budget, December 2025). Personal Allowance: £12,570 tax-free.

BandRateGross income range
Starter rate19%£12,571 to £16,537
Basic rate20%£16,538 to £29,526
Intermediate rate21%£29,527 to £43,662
Higher rate42%£43,663 to £75,000
Advanced rate45%£75,001 to £125,140
Top rate48%Over £125,140

National Insurance (UK-wide)

8% on £12,571 to £50,270 · 2% above £50,270

Personal Allowance taper

£1 lost per £2 earned above £100,000 · gone at £125,140

UK specialist calculators

For contracting, student loans, or England and Wales PAYE, we have dedicated tools.

Is your salary above UK market rate?

Now you know your take-home, check whether your gross is competitive for your role in the UK market.