Tax on £71,000 Dividends

On £71,000 in dividends with a £30,000 salary in the 2026-27 tax year, you pay £18,976.25 in dividend tax. Your total take-home pay (salary plus dividends minus all tax and NI) is £77,043.35 per year (£6,420.28 per month).

Receiving £71,000 in dividends on top of a £30,000 salary pushes some of your dividend income into the higher rate band. Your dividend tax bill is £18,976.25. After all deductions, you take home £77,043.35 per year (£6,420.28 per month). Your overall effective tax rate is 23.7%.

How UK dividend tax works

Dividends are taxed differently from salary. Everyone gets a £500 tax-free dividend allowance for 2026-27 (reduced from £1,000 in 2023/24 and £2,000 in 2022/23). Dividends above this allowance are taxed at:

  • 8.75% — basic rate (on dividends within the basic rate band)
  • 33.75% — higher rate (on dividends within the higher rate band)
  • 39.35% — additional rate (on dividends above the additional rate threshold)
Crucially, dividends sit on top of your other income when working out which band they fall into. So if your salary already uses up some of the basic rate band, your dividends start being taxed at the higher rate sooner.

Your dividend tax breakdown

With a £30,000 salary, your taxable salary (after the £12,070 personal allowance) is £17,930. This uses up part of the income tax bands before dividends are applied.

Of your £71,000 dividends:

  • £500 is covered by the dividend allowance (0%)
  • £19,270 taxed at 8.75% = £1686
  • £51,230 taxed at 33.75% = £17290
Total dividend tax: £18,976.25

How does this compare?

  • Receiving £76,000 in dividends would increase your dividend tax by £2313 to £21,288.75
  • Receiving £66,000 in dividends would decrease your dividend tax by £1813 to £17,163.75

Related calculations

Frequently asked questions

How much tax do I pay on £71,000 in dividends?

With a £30,000 salary, you pay £18,976.25 in dividend tax. Your total tax bill (including income tax and NI on your salary) is £23,956.65.

What is the dividend allowance for 2026-27?

The tax-free dividend allowance is £500 for 2026-27. This was reduced from £1,000 in 2023/24 and from £2,000 in 2022/23. The allowance uses up your tax band but is taxed at 0%.

Do dividends affect my tax band?

Yes. Dividends sit on top of your other income for the purposes of working out which tax band applies. If your salary uses up the basic rate band, your dividends will be taxed at the higher rate (33.75%) from the start.

£

Your annual salary or self-employment income before tax

£

Take-home pay

Monthly take-home£6,420.28
Annual take-home£77,043

Income tax on salary

Personal allowance£12,070
Income tax-£3,586.00
Basic rate (20%)-£3,586.00
National Insurance-£1,394.40

Dividend tax

Dividend allowance£500
Basic rate (8.75%)-£1,686.13
Higher rate (33.75%)-£17,290.13
Total dividend tax-£18,976.25

Summary

Total income£101,000
Total tax & NI-£23,956.65
Effective tax rate23.7%
Take-home pay£77,043