Newcastle vs Leeds

Newcastle vs Leeds

Compare £38,000 in Newcastle against £42,000 in Leeds. Which city leaves you better off?

North East vs Yorkshire

North East vs Yorkshire The calculator below is pre-filled with £38,000 in Newcastle and £42,000 in Leeds. Adjust the salaries, bedrooms, and other settings to match your situation.

City A

Annual salary (gross)

£

City B

Annual salary (gross)

£

Home size

I have children in childcare

Number of children

Pre-school age (assumed age 2)

Hours per week (per child)

hrs

Nursery rates: Newcastle £6.00/hr, Leeds £6.50/hr. Includes free hours and Tax-Free Childcare where eligible.

Pension contribution

Applied to both cities

%

Student loan plan

Tax code

Default 1257L


Share your result

The verdict

You're £113/mo better off in Leeds

Newcastle disposable

£819

Leeds disposable

£932

To match, you'd need £40,000 in Newcastle

Net pay — Newcastle

£2,459/mo

£29,512/year from £38,000

Net pay — Leeds

£2,687/mo

£32,248/year from £42,000

Annual difference

£1,356/yr

In favour of Leeds

Where your salary goes (monthly)

Cost-of-living breakdown (monthly)

Detailed monthly comparison

Category

Newcastle

Leeds


Income

Gross salary

£3,167

£3,500

Income Tax

-£392

-£456

National Insurance

-£157

-£182

Pension

-£158

-£175

Net take-home

£2,459

£2,687

Monthly costs

Rent (1-bed)

-£850

-£950

Council Tax

-£160

-£155

Transport

-£65

-£75

Groceries

-£230

-£230

Eating Out & Social

-£140

-£145

Utilities

-£130

-£130

Broadband

-£30

-£30

Occasional Uber

-£35

-£40

Total costs

-£1,640

-£1,755

Disposable income

£819

£932


Guide

How we calculate your comparison

1. Take-home pay — we calculate net salary for each city using current 2025/26 rates:
  • Income Tax (England or Scottish bands, auto-detected by city)
  • National Insurance contributions
  • Pension salary sacrifice
  • Student loan repayments (if applicable)
  • Personal Allowance taper for salaries above £100k
2. Cost of living — we subtract six key monthly costs for each city:
  • Rent: average 1-bed flat (HomeLet Rental Index, ONS)
  • Council Tax: Band D average (GOV.UK)
  • Transport: monthly commute (TfL, local transit data)
  • Groceries: single adult monthly spend (ONS Family Spending)
  • Utilities: gas, electric, water (Ofgem, regional data)
  • Broadband: average monthly cost (Ofcom)
3. Disposable income— what's left after essentials:
  • Disposable = net take-home pay - total monthly costs
  • This is what you have left to spend, save, or invest

Cost-of-living figures are city averages. Your actual costs will vary based on neighbourhood, lifestyle, and personal choices. Use this as a starting point for comparison, not a guarantee. Tax rates and thresholds are for the 2025/26 UK tax year. This is not financial advice.

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