Is £55,000 a Good Salary in the UK?
Yes — it's well above the UK average. The UK median full-time salary is around £37,000, so £55,000 is well above the UK median.
How £55,000 compares to the UK average
The median full-time salary in the UK is around £37,000 (ONS, latest data), and the mean is closer to £44,000 — pulled up by very high earners. The "average" most people mean is the median, so that's the fairer benchmark.
£55,000 is well above the UK median of £37,000, placing you in roughly the top quarter of earners. Part of your income is now taxed at the 40% higher rate (above £50,270 if you're over that line).
What £55,000 gets you after tax
A headline salary isn't what lands in your account. On £55,000, after Income Tax and National Insurance, your take-home is about £42,457 a year — roughly £3,538 a month for the 2026/27 tax year.
This is a comfortable salary even in higher-cost cities, supporting a mortgage and consistent saving. At this level, pension contributions start to become a meaningful tax-planning tool.
The honest verdict
£55,000 is a strong salary by UK standards — top-quarter territory. It affords a comfortable lifestyle in most areas, and it's worth checking whether pension contributions can reduce any 40% tax you pay.
See the full £55,000 take-home breakdown ›Is a different salary good?
"Good" is relative — it depends on your location, household, age and cost of living. Comparisons use ONS median full-time earnings. Take-home assumes the 1257L tax code, no student loan or pension, and residency in England, Wales or NI. Use the calculator for your exact figure.