Is £45,000 a good salary in the UK?
Trust and interpretation
This guide uses 2026/27-style UK salary assumptions to support explanation and planning.
Quick answer
Is £45,000 a good salary in the UK?
£45,000 can be considered good depending on location, housing costs, and lifestyle. The stronger way to judge it is by the after-tax monthly result, which is around £2,858.
- • Monthly take-home matters more than headline gross pay
- • City and rent context change what feels comfortable
- • Nearby salary bands are useful for judging trade-offs
- • Regional good-salary pages make the judgment more practical
How to judge this salary properly
A salary of £45,000 should not be judged as “good” or “bad” in isolation. The practical reading depends on the monthly net amount, the cost of housing, debt, transport, and whether you are comparing it against weaker or stronger nearby salary bands.
That is why the best next step is usually to open the full salary page, compare it with a nearby salary route, and then look at the same salary in a city-based context.
Next step routes
Move from this guide into the next useful route
These links connect the editorial explanation layer to salary breakdowns, monthly planning, comparison pages, and city-intent salary routes.
See £45,000 after tax
Move from explanation into the full salary breakdown route.
Compare £35,000 vs £45,000
See whether this salary is materially stronger than the nearby lower band.
Compare £45,000 vs £55,000
See whether the next salary band is worth it after deductions.
Reverse from about £5,000 / month
Switch into monthly planning instead of gross salary thinking.
£45,000 in London
Judge this salary in a real city-cost context.
Browse the salary hub
Move into the wider salary route system across the platform.