Congratulations on your graduation! As you enter the world of work, managing your money effectively from day one sets the foundation for your financial future. This guide covers everything new UK graduates need to know — from understanding your payslip to starting your pension and building wealth.
Understanding Your First Payslip
Your first payslip can be confusing. Here's what appears. Gross salary: your total pay before deductions. Income tax: collected through PAYE, based on your tax code (usually 1257L = £12,570 tax-free). National Insurance: deducted at 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270, then 2% above. Pension contribution: if you're auto-enrolled, around 5% of qualifying earnings. Net pay: what hits your bank account. Check your tax code — if it's wrong, you may over or underpay tax. If you have multiple jobs, your tax code may be adjusted. Student loan repayment: starts automatically when earnings exceed £27,295 (Plan 2) — 9% deducted above this threshold.
- •Gross salary: total pay before deductions
- •Tax code 1257L = £12,570 tax-free
- •National Insurance: 8% on £12,570-£50,270
- •Student loan: 9% above £27,295
- •Check tax code is correct
Starting Your First Budget
As a new graduate with regular income, budgeting becomes essential. Calculate your monthly take-home pay. List fixed expenses: rent, council tax, utilities, transport, phone, insurance. Set spending categories: groceries, social, hobbies. Use the 50/30/20 rule as a starting point: 50% needs (rent, bills, transport), 30% wants (social, hobbies, dining out), 20% savings (emergency fund, pension). Track your spending for the first month to see where money goes. Use apps like SYM to categorise and monitor. Adjust based on your actual spending patterns.
- •Calculate monthly take-home pay
- •List all fixed expenses first
- •50/30/20 rule: needs/wants/savings
- •Track spending for first month
- •Adjust as needed
Student Loan: Don't Panic
Your student loan is different from other debt. It's repaid through payroll — 9% of income above the threshold (£27,295 for Plan 2). It's automatically deducted — you don't choose to repay. It's written off after 30 years — you only repay what you can afford. It doesn't affect credit score — lenders see it differently from other debt. It doesn't mean you can't get a mortgage — lenders assess affordability, not loan balance. Don't overpay voluntarily — unless you're on a very high salary, it's usually better to let it be repaid through payroll. The loan amount doesn't matter for repayment — only your income matters.
- •9% of income above £27,295 (Plan 2)
- •Automatically deducted — no action needed
- •Written off after 30 years
- •Doesn't affect credit score
- •Don't voluntarily overpay
Start Your Pension — Now
If you're employed, you're likely auto-enrolled into a workplace pension. Here's why it matters. Employer contributions: they'll contribute at least 3% of your qualifying earnings — free money. Tax relief: the government adds 20% automatically — more if you're a higher rate taxpayer. Time is everything: starting at 25 instead of 35 could mean £100,000+ less in your pension. Even small contributions matter enormously. If your employer offers to match extra contributions, always say yes. If you opt out, you're turning down free money. Check your pension contributions are being made and consider increasing them as your salary grows.
- •Auto-enrolment: at least 3% employer contribution
- •Tax relief: government adds 20%
- •Starting early is worth £100,000+ over career
- •Always get full employer match
- •Increase contributions as salary grows
Build an Emergency Fund
An emergency fund protects you from unexpected costs. Start with £500-£1,000 as a mini emergency fund. Then build to 3 months of essential expenses. Keep it in an easy-access savings account. This covers: car repairs, broken phone, job loss, unexpected bills. It prevents you going into debt when surprises happen. Building an emergency fund takes time — start with whatever you can, even £25/month. Use the SYM app to track your progress. As your income grows, increase your target.
- •Start with £500 mini emergency fund
- •Build to 3 months of essential expenses
- •Keep in easy-access savings
- •Prevents debt from unexpected costs
- •Start with whatever you can afford
Avoid Common Mistakes
New graduates often make these money mistakes. Lifestyle inflation: resist upgrading everything now that you earn more. Buy a decent car: fancy cars depreciate massively. Finance everything: avoid high-interest credit. Ignore pension: it's boring but crucial. No savings buffer: unexpected costs happen to everyone. Not tracking spending: you can't improve what you don't measure. Comparing to others: everyone's situation differs. The key: live below your means, save consistently, and start early.
- •Resist lifestyle inflation
- •Avoid fancy cars on finance
- •Build emergency fund before luxuries
- •Start pension immediately
- •Track spending to manage it
#graduates#first job#budgeting#student finance#young adult
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