Is £70,000 a good salary in the UK?
A straight-answer comparison of £70,000 against the UK median, typical rent, and cost of living.
Short answer
£70,000 is well above median — a genuinely strong salary in most of the UK. That's roughly £35.90/hour and about £3,792/month take-home after tax and NI.
How it compares
- UK median full-time salary: around £35,000 (ONS, 2024).
- London median: around £44,000.
- Living wage (outside London): around £25,000 for full-time.
- Your £70,000: 100% above the UK median.
What it actually buys
After income tax and NI, £70,000 gross leaves roughly £45,500 net per year — around £3,792/month. Applied to the 30% rent-affordability rule, that suggests a rent budget of roughly £1,138/month.
Calculator deep-dive
What it depends on
- Location: £70,000 in London covers roughly 159% of the London median; in Manchester, Leeds, or Glasgow it comfortably exceeds the local median.
- Household structure: single earner, dual-income household, or supporting children changes the real spending power far more than the gross number does.
- Housing status: if you own outright or have low-LTV equity, £70,000 goes much further. If you rent privately in a high-demand city, the same gross salary feels materially smaller.
- Pension sacrifice: sacrificing 5–10% into pension reduces take-home but compounds into a significantly larger total compensation picture over a career.