Wealthfare.

Tax year 2026/27 · England, Wales and NI · standard tax code

£19,000 after tax

On a £19,000 salary in 2026/27, your take-home pay is £17,200 a year: £1,433 a month or £331 a week, after £1,286 income tax and £514 National Insurance.

AnnualMonthlyWeekly
Gross salary£19,000£1,583£365
Income tax£1,286£107£25
National Insurance£514£43£10
Take-home pay£17,200£1,433£331

With a student loan or pension

  • With a Plan 2 student loan: take-home drops to £1,433 a month (£0 a year in repayments).
  • Paying 5% into your pension: take-home is £1,370 a month, with £950 a year going into your pot.
  • In Scotland: take-home is £1,437 a month under Scottish income tax bands.

How £19,000 compares

£19,000 is about 51% below the UK median full-time salary of £39,039 (April 2025), higher than roughly 10% of UK full-time salaries. On a 37.5-hour week it works out at £9.74 an hour, or £365 a week before tax.

LowerUK medianHigher

Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2025, gross annual pay of full-time employees.

Common questions

How much is £19,000 after tax in the UK?
In the 2026/27 tax year, a £19,000 salary leaves £17,200 after tax: £1,433 a month or £331 a week, after £1,286 income tax and £514 National Insurance, assuming a standard tax code and no student loan or pension contributions.
What is £19,000 a month after tax?
£1,433 a month, before any student loan or pension deductions.
How much is £19,000 after tax with a Plan 2 student loan?
£17,200 a year, or £1,433 a month. The Plan 2 repayment is £0 a year.
Is £19,000 a good salary in the UK?
£19,000 is about 51% below the UK median full-time salary of £39,039 (April 2025, ONS), and higher than roughly 10% of UK full-time salaries. Whether it feels good depends heavily on where you live and your household: it stretches much further outside London and the South East, and a second household income changes the picture entirely.
What is £19,000 a year per hour?
£19,000 a year is £9.74 an hour before tax, assuming a 37.5-hour week, or £365 a week gross.
Is £19,000 after tax different in Scotland?
Yes. Scottish income tax bands differ, so take-home is £17,239 a year (£1,437 a month), £40 more than the rest of the UK.