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2025/26 Tax Year

£60,000 Salary - UK Employer Cost

To employ someone on a £60,000 salary in the UK, the total cost to the employer is £70,050 per year. That's +16.8% on top of the gross salary.

Gross Salary
£60,000
employee pay
Total Employer Cost
£70,050
per year
Employer NI
£8,250
15% rate
Employer Pension
£1,800
3% minimum

£60,000 Employment Cost Breakdown

DescriptionYearlyMonthly
Gross Salary£60,000.00£5,000.00
Employer National Insurance (15%)+£8,250.00+£687.50
Employer Pension (3%)+£1,800.00+£150.00
Total Employer Cost£70,050.00£5,837.50

Employer Cost vs Employee Take Home

What the Employer Pays

£70,050

total cost per year

Gross Salary£60,000
Employer NI£8,250
Employer Pension£1,800

What the Employee Gets

£45,357

take home pay per year

Gross Salary£60,000
Income Tax-£11,432
Employee NI-£3,211

The employer pays £24,693 more than what the employee takes home (54% difference)

Adjust Pension Contribution

Employee Salary

Enter the gross salary for 2025/26

£
3%
3% (minimum)15%

Total Employer Cost

What it actually costs to employ someone

£70,050
per year
+16.8% overhead
Gross Salary£60,000
Employer NI (15%)+£8,250
Employer Pension (3%)+£1,800
Total Cost£70,050
£5,838
per month
£269
per working day

Understanding £60,000 Employer Costs

When hiring an employee on a £60,000 salary in the UK for 2025/26, the total cost to the employer is £70,050. This includes the gross salary plus employer National Insurance contributions and pension contributions.

Employer National Insurance is charged at 15% on all earnings above £5,000 per year. For a £60,000 salary, this amounts to £8,250 per year.

The minimum employer pension contribution under auto-enrollment is 3%, which adds £1,800 to the annual cost. Many employers offer higher pension contributions as part of their benefits package.

Compare this to the employee's perspective: see the £60,000 take-home pay calculation.