Money Tips

New Graduate Money Guide: Your First Year of Real Finances

SYM Team

Your first payslip after graduation can be a shock. That £28,000 starting salary? After deductions, you'll actually take home around **£22,400 per year (£1,867/month)**. Here's where the money goes. **Income tax:** You pay 20% on everything above the Personal Allowance (£12,570 in 2026).

Your first payslip after graduation can be a shock. That £28,000 starting salary? After deductions, you'll actually take home around **£22,400 per year (£1,867/month)**. Here's where the money goes. **Income tax:** You pay 20% on everything above the Personal Allowance (£12,570 in 2026). On a £28,000 salary, that's 20% of £15,430 = £3,086/year. **National Insurance:** You pay 8% on earnings above the NI threshold. On £28,000, that's approximately £1,510/year. **Student loan repayment:** If you're on Plan 5 (started university from September 2023), you repay 9% on earnings above approximately £25,000. On a £28,000 salary, that's 9% of £3,000 = **£270/year** — just £22.50/month. Plans 1 and 2 have different thresholds. **Workplace pension:** Auto-enrolment means 5% of your qualifying earnings goes to a pension (3% from your employer, 2% from you — though many employers contribute more). This is free money from your employer, so never opt out. Understanding these deductions is crucial because your spending plan must be based on **take-home pay, not gross salary**. Many graduates overshoot their budget by planning around their headline salary number.

With your real take-home figure in hand, build your first proper budget. **Essential costs first:** Rent (aim for 30-35% of take-home, so £560-£650/month on £1,867), council tax, utilities, food, transport, phone. In many UK cities, these essentials total £1,200-£1,500/month. In London, add 30-50%. **Then savings:** Even £50-£100/month from your very first paycheck builds powerful habits. Set up an automatic transfer on payday. You'll never miss money you never see. Read our [saving challenge for beginners](/blog/saving-challenge-for-beginners) guide for making this fun. **Then lifestyle:** Whatever remains is your discretionary spending — socialising, clothes, entertainment, hobbies. This is usually £200-£500/month depending on your location and rent costs. **The [50/30/20 rule](/blog/50-30-20-budget-rule) adapted for graduates:** Aim for 50% on needs, 30% on wants, and 20% on savings/debt. If 20% isn't possible immediately (especially in high-rent areas), start with 10% and increase by 1% each month until you reach your target. **Common graduate budget mistake:** Not budgeting at all. Many graduates go from student budgeting (minimal income, maximal support) to working income with zero financial structure. Without a plan, lifestyle inflation consumes every pay rise, and savings never materialise.

Student loan repayment causes enormous anxiety among graduates, most of which is unnecessary. Here's what actually matters. **It's not really a loan — it's a graduate tax.** You repay a percentage of earnings above a threshold. If you earn below the threshold, you pay nothing. If you lose your job, repayments stop immediately. It never affects your credit score (it doesn't appear on credit reports). After 40 years (Plan 5) or 30 years (Plan 2), any remaining balance is written off. **Should you pay it off early?** Almost certainly not. The interest rate makes early repayment financially suboptimal for most graduates. Money you'd use to overpay your student loan would generate better returns in a [stocks and shares ISA](/blog/stocks-and-shares-isa-beginners) or even a high-interest savings account. The only scenario where early repayment makes sense is if you're a very high earner (£60,000+) with a relatively small remaining balance. **Don't confuse student debt with consumer debt.** [Credit card debt](/blog/pay-off-credit-card-debt-uk) at 20% interest must be prioritised. Student loan debt at ~7% (Plan 5) or ~RPI+3% (Plan 2), with income-contingent repayment and eventual write-off, is fundamentally different. Never use savings to overpay student loans while carrying high-interest consumer debt. **Check your repayment plan.** Log into the Student Loans Company website to confirm your plan type, balance, and repayment threshold. Ensure your employer is deducting the correct amount.

Your first year of work is the best time to establish habits that will serve you for decades. **Priority 1: Emergency fund.** Start building a [rainy day fund](/blog/rainy-day-fund-vs-emergency-fund) of £1,000. This takes 5-10 months at £100-£200/month and provides crucial protection against unexpected costs that might otherwise go on a credit card. **Priority 2: Workplace pension.** Ensure you're enrolled and receiving your employer's full match. If they match up to 5% and you're only contributing 2%, you're leaving 3% of your salary as free money on the table. Increasing your contribution by even 1% now — when you're used to living on less — is painless and compounds enormously over 40 years. **Priority 3: Avoid lifestyle inflation.** The jump from student income to working income feels enormous. Resist the urge to upgrade everything simultaneously. If you were living on £800/month as a student, don't immediately spend £1,800/month just because you can. Every pound of lifestyle inflation you avoid becomes a pound of savings or investment. **Priority 4: Open a [Lifetime ISA](/blog/lifetime-isa-guide-uk).** If you're under 40 and might buy a first home, a LISA gives you a **25% government bonus** on savings up to £4,000/year. Saving £100/month into a LISA means the government adds £300/year for free. There is no better deal in UK personal finance for eligible first-time buyers.

**Mistake 1: Using credit to maintain a graduate lifestyle.** You've earned your degree and feel you 'deserve' nice things. But funding a lifestyle on credit cards or Buy Now Pay Later creates a debt spiral that undermines your entire financial future. Live within your actual means. **Mistake 2: Ignoring your pension because retirement feels distant.** A 22-year-old who invests £100/month until 60 will have significantly more than someone who starts at 32 investing £200/month until 60 — despite the late starter investing twice as much monthly. Compound interest rewards early starters disproportionately. **Mistake 3: Not negotiating your starting salary.** Many graduate roles have some salary flexibility. Research the market rate on Glassdoor, and don't be afraid to ask for more. Even £2,000 more at the start compounds across your entire career through percentage-based raises. **Mistake 4: Keeping a student bank account too long.** Student accounts often convert to accounts with high charges or poor features after 1-2 years. Proactively switch to a graduate account or a [best-in-class current account](/blog/bank-switching-bonuses-uk) before the honeymoon period ends. **Mistake 5: Financial comparison with peers.** Your university friend who's 'always on holiday' might be funded by parents or drowning in credit card debt. Make financial decisions based on your own situation, not social media appearances. Track your net worth privately and focus on your own progress with SYM.
#graduate finance#first job#student loans#UK money guide#young adults

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