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26 answers

This site will give you the answer. I love it, you just click the relevant boxes and it calcultes everything. I'll assume you're single, under 65 with no student loan!

Annually: £28,032.92; Monthly: £2,336.08; Weekly: £539.09

2006-10-11 06:28:14 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

this is pretty easy coz you wouldn't want to keep dat much cash with you in da house anyways.

Of course if you don't calculate the tax, you would have £3233.33. However, if you pay tax, N.I, Direct debits (e.g. phone bills and mortgage) and cigaretts then you will be hopefully left with much that you can drive a car around and eat out a couple times per calander month.

I belive you would have a pretty comfortable life, indeed, hoping that you get paid more so you will take home.

2006-10-11 04:14:16 · answer #2 · answered by monzavim 2 · 0 0

You will be in the 40% tax bracket and you will also pay NI contributions, also you will need to work out what will be taken for pension provision, its not a question that can really be answered on here as depends on those and if you are paying off a student loan through payroll, just wait til the first payslip gets to you than believing poeple on here

2006-10-11 04:12:19 · answer #3 · answered by SunnyDays 5 · 1 0

If you get paid on the 1st and the 15th, you would make 1583.33 a payday.
This means you'll make 3166.67 a month.

If you get paid every other Thursday (or any other day of the week) you'll make 1461.53 a payday.

This means that most of the time you'll still be paid twice a month at 2923.06 a month but there will wind up being a couple months where you'll have 3 paydays in a month in which case you'll make 4284.59 on those months.

From this you'd have to take out taxes or other deductions and since I live in the US, I have no idea how that works. sorry

2006-10-11 04:14:36 · answer #4 · answered by 1loopyferretpsycho 3 · 0 2

£38800 divided by 12

2006-10-11 03:58:06 · answer #5 · answered by caz 3 · 1 0

You will be lucky if you get £2.000.per.month.The more you earn, the more you pay on N.I. you will possibly have private/works pension deductions and of course tax, earning a salary of that amount I expect your tax rate will be higher than 24%. It depends also on what tax deduction you qualify for. Your tax code determines that. The lower you code number the more tax you will pay. Hard Cheese!

2006-10-11 04:21:17 · answer #6 · answered by Social Science Lady 7 · 0 0

3233.33 per month gross - ie. before tax and N.I. How much tax you will pay depends on your tax code. That kind of income per month - you could be in the higher tax band.

2006-10-11 04:14:49 · answer #7 · answered by nellyenno 3 · 0 0

D,
If you have been offered a raise, ask the cute chick in accounts (or the recruitment agency??) to work it out for you.
But for a good estimate try this!
http://www.pru.co.uk/home/calculator/income_tax/

2006-10-11 04:11:51 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

After tax and national insurance?

off the top of my head somewhere in the region of £2500

2006-10-11 04:00:55 · answer #9 · answered by Matt 3 · 0 0

Depending on where you live, you could net about Two-Grand a month. Probably about 1,800 would be a better estimate.

2006-10-11 04:00:48 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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