£17,000 Pension Contribution — Tax Relief Breakdown
A £17,000 net pension contribution on a £50,000 salary in the 2026-27 tax year receives £4,250 in total tax relief. Your gross pension contribution is £21,250. The effective cost to you is £17,000. The annual allowance is £60,000.
If you contribute £17,000 (net) to your pension on a £50,000 salary, basic rate relief of £4,250 is added automatically, giving a gross contribution of £21,250. As a basic rate taxpayer, all your relief comes at source — no self-assessment claim needed. Your effective cost is £17,000.
How pension tax relief works
When you contribute to a pension in the UK, the government adds tax relief to boost your savings:
- Basic rate relief (20%) is added automatically by your pension provider. For every £80 you pay in, £100 goes into your pension.
- Higher rate relief (40%) — if you're a higher rate taxpayer, you claim the extra 20% back through self-assessment.
- Additional rate relief (45%) — additional rate taxpayers can claim the extra 25% back through self-assessment.
Basic rate vs higher rate relief
The amount of relief you get depends on your tax bracket:
| Tax band | Salary example | Gross contribution | Total relief | Effective cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic (20%) | £35,000 | £21,250 | £4,250 | £17,000 |
| Higher (40%) | £60,000 | £21,250 | £6,196 | £15,054 |
Annual Allowance
The Annual Allowance for 2026-27 is £60,000 (or 100% of your earnings, whichever is lower). This is the maximum total gross pension contributions (yours plus your employer's) that benefit from tax relief in a single year.
Your total gross contribution of £21,250 is within your Annual Allowance, leaving £38,750 of unused allowance.
Carry forward: You can carry forward unused Annual Allowance from the previous 3 tax years, allowing larger contributions if you haven't used your full allowance recently.
Employer contributions
Employer pension contributions are not taxed as income and don't count towards your personal tax bill. However, they do count towards the Annual Allowance.
Under auto-enrolment, most employers contribute at least 3% of qualifying earnings. Many offer salary sacrifice arrangements, where your gross salary is reduced in exchange for higher employer pension contributions — saving both you and your employer National Insurance.
Related calculations
- Take-home pay on £50,000 salary — see your full tax breakdown
- Self-employed tax on £50,000 — pension relief for sole traders
- Dividend tax on £17,000 — compare pension saving vs dividends
Frequently asked questions
How much tax relief do I get on a £17,000 pension contribution?
On a £50,000 salary, you receive £4,250 in total tax relief. Basic rate relief of £4,250 is added automatically.
What is relief at source?
Relief at source means your pension provider claims 20% basic rate tax relief from HMRC and adds it to your pension pot. You pay £80 and £100 goes in. If you're a higher or additional rate taxpayer, you claim the extra relief through your self-assessment tax return.
Can I contribute more than the Annual Allowance?
Yes, but contributions above the Annual Allowance (£60,000) are subject to an Annual Allowance charge at your marginal tax rate. You can carry forward unused allowance from the previous 3 years, which may allow higher contributions without a charge.
What happened to the Lifetime Allowance?
The Lifetime Allowance was abolished from April 2024. It has been replaced by the Lump Sum Allowance (£268,275) and the Lump Sum & Death Benefit Allowance (£1,073,100), which limit the amount you can take as tax-free lump sums from your pension.
Is salary sacrifice better for pension contributions?
Often yes. With salary sacrifice, your employer reduces your gross pay and contributes the amount directly to your pension. This saves both employee and employer National Insurance (8% and 13.8% respectively). However, it reduces your gross salary which may affect mortgage applications and some benefits.
Your gross employment income before tax
Net amount you pay in — basic rate relief is added automatically
What your employer pays into your pension (optional)