Edinburgh cobblestone street at twilight with warm streetlights

Where can I afford to
live in the UK?

Enter your salary. See every UK city ranked by how far your money actually goes.

HMRC 2025/26 10 UK cities Real cost data Free, no sign-up

Your situation

£ /year
£10,000 £35,000 £200,000
£
£

Common salary affordability snapshots

Based on HMRC 2025/26 rates, single household, PAYE, 5% pension, no student loan.

£25,000 salary

Take-home: ~£1,720/mo
CityMonthly surplusStatus
Belfast+£448Comfortable
Newcastle+£360Comfortable
Glasgow+£310Comfortable
Cardiff+£280Tight
London-£312Stretched

£35,000 salary

Take-home: ~£2,275/mo
CityMonthly surplusStatus
Belfast+£960Comfortable
Newcastle+£870Comfortable
Manchester+£780Comfortable
Bristol+£310Tight
London+£190Tight

£50,000 salary

Take-home: ~£3,100/mo
CityMonthly surplusStatus
Belfast+£1,880Comfortable
Glasgow+£1,700Comfortable
Leeds+£1,620Comfortable
Edinburgh+£1,200Comfortable
London+£820Comfortable

£80,000 salary

Take-home: ~£4,500/mo
CityMonthly surplusStatus
Belfast+£3,250Comfortable
Newcastle+£3,100Comfortable
Manchester+£2,900Comfortable
Bristol+£2,600Comfortable
London+£2,100Comfortable

Frequently asked questions

How is the monthly surplus calculated?
Monthly surplus = take-home pay minus essential living costs (rent, utilities, groceries, transport, council tax). Take-home is calculated using HMRC 2025/26 income tax and National Insurance rates. Living costs are sourced from real regional data. A higher surplus means more money left over for savings, leisure, and emergencies.
What does "comfortable", "tight", and "stretched" mean?
Comfortable (green): £500+ monthly surplus — enough for savings, leisure, and unexpected costs.
Tight (amber): £100–£499 surplus — workable but little room for error.
Stretched (red): Under £100 surplus, or a negative number — essential costs exceed your take-home.
Which UK cities are included?
London, Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Bristol, Newcastle, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Cardiff, and Belfast. All major UK cities with distinct cost of living profiles.
Are Edinburgh and Glasgow calculated using Scottish tax rates?
Yes. Scottish income tax rates (SRIT) apply to residents of Scotland. The calculator automatically uses Scottish tax bands for Edinburgh and Glasgow, which have an additional rate band at 39% for higher earners (£42,748–£125,140).
How does freelance / self-employed differ from PAYE?
Freelancers pay Class 2 (9%) and Class 4 (2%) National Insurance instead of Class 1. The calculator also factors in an estimated £150/month accountancy fee. Generally, freelancers have a slightly lower net income at the same gross earnings due to higher NI rates.