What will you actually take home? This calculator estimates net pay for a Transport Planner for the 2025/26 tax year (after income tax, National Insurance and pension). Use your band to pre-fill a typical salary or pop in a custom amount.

Assumptions and pay data

Pay data: Transport sector pay. Illustrative; TfL, rail and highways use various agreements. Check your employer or union for current rates.

  • Tax year 2025/26 (6 April 2025 to 5 April 2026). England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Scotland uses different income tax bands.
  • Income tax: personal allowance £12,570 (tapered above £100k), basic 20% to £50,270, higher 40% to £125,140, additional 45% above.
  • National Insurance: primary threshold £12,570, 8% on earnings up to £50,268, 2% above. Pension contributions don't reduce NI (relief at source).
  • Pension: enter your member contribution % if you know it (e.g. from your payslip). Public sector schemes use tiered rates; we use a single % for simplicity. Student loan and other deductions aren't included.
  • Illustrative only. For exact figures, use your payslip or HMRC's calculator.

Take-Home Pay Calculator

You'll see:

  • Estimated take-home pay (after tax, NI and pension)
  • Monthly and annual net figures for 2025/26

Loading calculator…

Frequently asked questions

About this role

What is a Transport Planner?

A Transport Planner works on transport policy, modelling or scheme design. They may work for a council, TfL or consultancy. Pay is typically on planning/engineering scales.

Is it a rewarding career?

Transport planning offers variety and impact on places. Pay and satisfaction depend on employer and role. Progression to senior planner or manager is common.

What will I take home?

Use the calculator above to see an illustrative take-home for 2025/26. Your actual payslip may differ due to pension tiers, student loan or other deductions. Scotland uses different income tax bands.

Disclaimer

This calculator provides illustrative estimates only and is not financial or career advice. Pay rules and allowances can change. Always check your employer or official sources for definitive figures.