2026/27 tax year

Pension Tax Relief on a £40,000 Income 2026/27

With a £2,000 gross contribution under relief at source, total pension tax relief is £400. Net cost to you: £1,600 (£133/month). Under salary sacrifice, the effective cost drops further to £1,440.

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Results — £40,000 income, £2,000 contribution
Relief at source
Gross contribution
£2,000
Total relief
£400
Net cost
£1,600
Marginal rate
20%
Basic rate relief (20%) £400
Higher rate extra relief £0
Monthly net cost £133/month
Salary sacrifice
Gross contribution
£2,000
Total tax relief
£400
Net cost (incl. NI)
£1,440
Marginal rate
20%
Tax relief (income tax) £400
Employee NI saving £160
Employer NI saving £300
How relief works at £40,000

Which tax band applies and what relief you get

On a £40,000 income you are a basic-rate taxpayer paying 20% income tax. Your marginal income tax rate is 20%.

Under relief at source, your provider claims the full 20% basic rate relief automatically from HMRC — no Self Assessment needed. Total relief on a £2,000 contribution is £400.

Under salary sacrifice, your gross salary is reduced by £2,000 before income tax and National Insurance are calculated. This saves you income tax and employee NI (saving an additional £160), bringing your effective net cost down to £1,440. Your employer also saves NI of £300 — some employers pass this saving into your pension.

Other income levels
£20,000 £25,000 £30,000 £35,000 £40,000 £45,000 £50,000 £60,000 £75,000 £100,000 £120,000 £150,000
Figures are estimates for the 2026/27 tax year, England/Wales/NI, using a 5% contribution scenario. Results are not financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified adviser for personal guidance. GOV.UK pension tax relief · Methodology