Oh yeah - I was looking at the rate after the personal allowance which is tax free. I thought 37k was a bit low!Though isn't it £50,271
Oh yeah - I was looking at the rate after the personal allowance which is tax free. I thought 37k was a bit low!Though isn't it £50,271
10 years ago £50k wasn’t low. Nowadays so many have drifted into the higher bracket. I’m not saying £50k is low income, but a one earner family with 2 kids and a say sole £60k income isn’t ‘rich’ anymore.Oh yeah - I was looking at the rate after the personal allowance which is tax free. I thought 37k was a bit low!
Oh yeah - I was looking at the rate after the personal allowance which is tax free. I thought 37k was a bit low!
Yeah, I don't think the tax thresholds are that unreasonable now I'm reading it properly!I think people need to be tax educated. The 40% tax rate is on £50,271-£125,140. On a yearly salary of £50,500, you would pay:
0% tax on £12,570.
20% on £37,700
40% on £229.
I don't think you are being harshly punished...
Yep, astounds me so many people don’t know how tax & thresholds work.I think people need to be tax educated. The 40% tax rate is on £50,271-£125,140. On a yearly salary of £50,500, you would pay:
0% tax on £12,570.
20% on £37,700
40% on £229.
I don't think you are being harshly punished...
I have heard about people worried about accepting pay rises as they think they will have less money. It is a dangerous myth.Yep, astounds me so many people don’t know how tax & thresholds work.
However, if you are on the threshold and you get a pay rise, then it isn’t as attractive as it looks initially. However, you will be better off, just not as much as you thought.I have heard about people worried about accepting pay rises as they think they will have less money. It is a dangerous myth.
Agree with you both & that’s why tax education is key. There are some really nutty concepts out there.However, if you are on the threshold and you get a pay rise, then it isn’t as attractive as it looks initially. However, you will be better off, just not as much as you thought.
However, if you are on the threshold and you get a pay rise, then it isn’t as attractive as it looks initially. However, you will be better off, just not as much as you thought.
I have heard about people worried about accepting pay rises as they think they will have less money. It is a dangerous myth.
I agree, just not as much as you may have thought. I’m all for the progressive tax rate, but I think the thresholds should have gone up - maybe not the 40% band as much, but the 0 rate definitely. This way those on low incomes can keep more. Once you earn over £125k you have no personal allowance so it doesn’t help the more wealthierThe key point is you will be better off. Someone on 60,000 is considerably better off than someone on 50000.
60,000: 45,361 take home pay. Not too shabby!
50,000: 39,521 take home.
So, you are £6000 better off.
Assuming 40 hours per week, 48 weeks per year (1824 hours of work):
60,000: Just under £33 per hour
50,000: Just over £27 per hour
Whatever happens, you get more and more money.
I have a huge amount of sympathy for top end earners, as you can obviously tell...This can be true if you are losing a child benefit or similar which is a cliff edge all of nothing and also on the gap between 100k and 125k where you would pay income tax of 60% and NI of 2%. The £100k cliff edge you lose childcare and also only take home 38% of your salary for that threshold.
it’s a very strange quirk.
I have a huge amount of sympathy for top end earners, as you can obviously tell...
I don't think you'll find much sympathy for people on that sort of salary and to be honest, most people on that sort of salary are savvy enough to work around it. I think you can do something like increase your pension contributions and keep your taxable salary below the threshold.This can be true if you are losing a child benefit or similar which is a cliff edge all of nothing and also on the gap between 100k and 125k where you would pay income tax of 60% and NI of 2%. The £100k cliff edge you lose childcare and also only take home 38% of your salary for that threshold.
it’s a very strange quirk.
I don't think you'll find much sympathy for people on that sort of salary. and to be honest, most people on that sort of salary are savvy enough to work around it. I think you can do something like increase your pension contributions and keep your taxable salary below the threshold.
I get your sentiment, but we know it doesn’t work like that. If so footballers would be the hardest working people on the planet!When you are earning roughly 4x the average salary of a nurse, are you working 4 times as hard as she is?
When you are earning roughly 4x the average salary of a nurse, are you working 4 times as hard as she is?