Salary questions

Is £33,000 a Good Salary in the UK?

Is £33,000 actually good in the UK? We break down your take-home pay, what it buys in different cities, and how it compares to the national median.

June 2025 · 5 min read

£33,000 is approaching the UK median of £35,404 — putting you around the bottom 45% of full-time earners. Whether it's "good" depends entirely on where you live and what stage of your career you're at. Here's the full picture.

£33,000 in Context

Near median
vs UK median (£35,404)
£2,273
Estimated monthly take-home
17.3%
Effective tax rate (inc. NI)

Your Take-Home Pay at £33,000

DeductionAnnualMonthly
Gross salary£33,000£2,750
Income tax-£4,086-£340
National Insurance-£1,634-£136
Take-home£27,280£2,273

These figures assume no student loan, pension contributions, or other deductions. Use our take-home pay calculator for a personalised figure.

What Does £33,000 Get You by City?

CityVerdict at £33,000
LondonTight. Flatshare almost essential. Very limited savings.
Bristol / EdinburghManageable. 1-bed possible with careful budgeting.
Manchester / LeedsComfortable in a 1-bed. Some savings possible.
Birmingham / SheffieldVery comfortable. Savings and lifestyle both strong.
Liverpool / CardiffVery comfortable. Good savings possible.
Northern / rural areasVery comfortable. Homeownership realistic.

Is £33,000 Good for Your Age?

Context matters a great deal here. ONS data shows median salaries by age group:

At £33,000, you're at or above the median for your twenties and competitive into your thirties. See our full average salary by age guide for the complete picture.

See How £33,000 Compares in Your Role

Our salary checker benchmarks your pay against real ONS data for your specific job and location.

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Frequently Asked Questions

£33,000 is approaching the UK median of £35,404. Outside London it supports a comfortable lifestyle. In London it is tight and typically requires flatsharing.

At £33,000 your estimated take-home is £27,280 per year (£2,273/month) after income tax and National Insurance. This assumes no student loan or pension deductions.

Yes, in most cities outside London. In London it requires careful budgeting and often a flatshare.

Source: ONS ASHE 2024; HMRC tax rates 2024/25