Annual gross salary
Before tax, your total yearly pay
£
Your city
Compare to your local region
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Your income rank
You earn more than 43% of people in the UK
UK percentile
Top 57%
Nottingham region
Top 50%
Where you stand
🇬🇧
UK National — 43th percentile
0th
25th
£25k
Median
£35k
75th
£50k
100th
🏙️
Nottingham (East Midlands) — 50th percentile
0th
25th
£23k
Median
£32k
75th
£44k
100th
UK income distribution
Frequency distribution, full-time employees
East Midlands income distribution
Frequency distribution, full-time employees
Guide
Income Percentile Questions
What does my income percentile mean?
Being in the 43th percentile means you earn more than 43% of UK full-time workers. For example, someone in the 50th percentile earns more than half of all workers — that’s the median. The top 10% earn over £69,900, the top 5% earn over £90,000, and the top 1% earn over £175,000.
Why do regional percentiles differ from the national one?
Salaries vary significantly across the UK. London’s median (£44,370) is 27% higher than the national median (£34,963), while regions like Wales (£30,800) and Northern Ireland (£30,000) sit well below. Your East Midlands rank may be higher or lower than your national rank depending on local salary levels. This matters for understanding your real purchasing power — earning £40,000 in London is very different from earning £40,000 in Newcastle.
What is the median salary in the UK?
The median gross annual salary for full-time employees in the UK is £34,963 as of the 2023/24 tax year. This is the midpoint — half of all full-time workers earn more, and half earn less. The mean (average) is higher because a small number of very high earners pull it up.
What salary puts you in the top 10% in the UK?
To be in the top 10% of UK earners, you need a gross annual salary of approximately £69,900 or more. The top 5% earn over £90,000 and the top 1% earn over £175,000. In London, the thresholds are higher: you need about £97,000 to reach the top 10%.
Does this include all income or just employment income?
This calculator is based on gross annual pay from employment for full-time employees. It does not include self-employment income, investment returns, rental income, or benefits. The self-employed and part-time workers have different income distributions, so your percentile here reflects how you compare to other full-time employees specifically.
How often is the data updated?
The ONS publishes ASHE data annually, typically in November. We use the latest available release (2024, covering tax year 2023/24). Salary distributions tend to shift gradually year on year, so the percentiles remain a good guide even between releases.
How We Calculate
- Only covers full-time employees — part-time workers and the self-employed are excluded
- Based on gross pay before tax, not take-home pay
- Does not account for cost of living differences between regions
- Household income (combined earners) would give a different picture than individual income
All data is sourced from the ONS ASHE Table 8. This is an illustrative tool, not financial advice.
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