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View Full Version : Circa 20,000/y rate of tax.


Frankish
10th January 2010, 01:37
Hi..

I'm a 21 y/o (living with parents, yes I know :redface:), potentially heading into
a supervisory position worth around £20,000 a year.
I need to know, with taxes etc spinning me around on the spot.. what portion
of that £20,000 would be mine for keeps, after all the deductions - would
a salary on that scale be worth me looking into "spreading my wings" and finding
a place of my own.

I don't particularly like living at home and don't want to have to burden my
parents for very much longer if I can help it.

Can someone tell me where I stand and what the best course of action should
be for someone in my position?

I would really appreciate any input.

Thanks!

cmcp
10th January 2010, 01:42
Employed? I think you're looking at roughly 22% tax and national insurance.

20000 x 0.78 = £15600, /12 = £1300 pm.

bwglaw
10th January 2010, 01:43
Your take home pay woiuld be around £1300 per month. Difficult to give exact figures as this would depend on your tax code but it is likely to be around that amount.

Frankish
10th January 2010, 01:46
Employed? I think you're looking at roughly 22% tax and national insurance.

20000 x 0.78 = £15600, /12 = £1300 pm.

Currently as a Duty Manager yes, at a wage paying little over £700 pm if I'm lucky.

So what are the thoughts on going solo.. is £1,300 pm liveable in areas like
Cheshire / Flintshire? You'll have to forgive my apparent lack of general knowledge.

EDIT:: Responses have been super fast and helpful, thank you :)

cmcp
10th January 2010, 02:00
is it enough

i don't know, is it? you'll need to budget out your monthly outgoings: rent, council tax, bills, food, travel, social. if your income covers all that plus a wee bit more for some comics then you're sorted :)

Frankish
10th January 2010, 08:58
Thank you all for the really fast responses and for clearing all that up for me.
You've all been really helpful! :)

jones87
10th January 2010, 14:04
listen to tax man dot com is a good calculator .

Tom McClelland
10th January 2010, 14:10
Just to confirm, with an annual salary of £20k/year assuming no other income or special circumstances you're looking at £1310.50/month take home.

When I was your age I did a couple of spreadsheets starting at monthly net pay and working out as many fixed outgoings as I could per month to see what I could afford to rent/buy. The single biggest expense, if you need to, will probably be motoring. It is astonishing how much running a car costs if you sit down and work it all out.

jones87
10th January 2010, 14:19
As Tom says, work out your outgoings. I would save SO much money if I still lived with my parents, but I think I would go mad :redface:

tophatandwellies
10th January 2010, 14:29
Don't be red faced at being at home with the folks. I've bounced back to mine several times now. I'm now nearing 30, and back living with my dad.

I'm back because I suffered an injury which led in a round about way to losing my job. I also split with my bloke, and my mam died around the same time. I'm now on a contract which is renewed every 3 months so I'm never a full employee. Being at home gives me flexibility to figure out where I'm going to go. It's allowing me to consider a business start up because there is a level of security and support here (my dad is a business owner, so I can ask him a lot of the standard questions and he can point me in the direction of a good accountant, etc). It also gives him a bit of support and family around him now he's lost his wife.

It's circumstancial and doesn't define me. I pay board over to him (actually there are set household things I pay which are counted as my board), my sister is also at home at the moment and does likewise. It's not ideal but it works for us at the moment.

I guess what I'm trying to say is, yes you can afford to live away, but think it through properly. You are likely to be on a 3 or 6 month trial - perhaps get that out of the way before you move out? Pay board during that time so you get used to paying out - homes are expensive. Save up regularly so you have a deposit, and a financial cushion, in case you need it.

Also when you move out consider flat/houseshares/renting a room to begin with. It's company and can work out cheaper to share.