Final Pay When Leaving A Job UK Calculator

Final Pay When Leaving A Job Calculator UK 2026 | Last Payslip Calculator
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Final Pay When Leaving A Job UK Calculator

Work out your last payslip when leaving a job in the UK. Instantly calculate outstanding basic pay, accrued holiday pay, and notice pay owed on your final wage.

💼 Final Payslip
🏖️ Accrued Holiday
📆 Notice Pay / PILON
🇬🇧 UK Employment Law

Final Pay Details

Enter your salary, holiday and notice details to estimate your final pay

💷 Salary & Final Period

Your gross annual salary before tax and National Insurance.

Used to calculate your daily rate of pay.

Number of working days since your last payday up to your leaving date.


🏖️ Holiday Entitlement

Total statutory + contractual holiday days per full leave year (28 is standard UK minimum incl. bank holidays).

Calendar days from the start of your leave year up to your leaving date.

Days of holiday you’ve already used this leave year.


📆 Notice & Deductions

Only applies if you’re being paid instead of working your notice period.

Any amounts your employer can deduct, such as unreturned equipment or loans.

Your Final Pay Estimate

Basic pay, accrued holiday, notice pay and full breakdown

💼

Enter your details above and click Calculate Final Pay to reveal your estimated last payslip.

What Can Be Included In Final Pay

A quick reference for the typical items that make up (or reduce) a final payslip when leaving a job in the UK.

Item Adds / Deducts Typical Basis Notes
Outstanding basic payAddsDaily rate × days workedFor days worked since last payday
Accrued holiday payAddsDaily rate × accrued daysUntaken statutory/contractual leave
Excess holiday takenDeductsDaily rate × excess daysOnly if contract allows recovery
Notice pay (PILON)AddsDaily/weekly rate × notice periodOnly if paid instead of working notice
Bonus / commission owedAddsContractual termsPro-rata unless contract states otherwise
Company property / loansDeductsAgreed valueMust be authorised in your contract
Tax & National InsuranceDeductsPAYE, per HMRC tax codeApplied to the gross total above

Final Pay Calculator FAQ

Everything you need to know about final pay, accrued holiday, and notice pay when leaving a job in the UK.

Final pay usually includes any outstanding basic salary up to your last working day, pay for any accrued but untaken holiday entitlement, and notice pay if you are paid in lieu of notice (PILON). It may also include any owed bonuses, commission, or overtime, minus any deductions such as unreturned company property or an overpayment of holiday already taken.

Accrued holiday pay is calculated by working out what proportion of your annual leave year you actually worked, multiplying this by your annual holiday entitlement, and then subtracting any holiday you have already taken. The remaining days are paid at your normal daily rate of pay. If you have taken more holiday than you have accrued, your employer can usually deduct the overpayment from your final pay.

Yes. Under UK law, almost all workers are entitled to be paid for any statutory holiday they have accrued but not taken by the time they leave their job. This is a legal right and cannot usually be withheld by an employer, except to recover holiday taken in excess of what has been accrued.

PILON stands for Payment In Lieu Of Notice. It is a payment an employer makes instead of requiring you to work your full notice period. It is usually calculated as your normal pay for the length of your notice period and is taxed in the same way as normal earnings under current HMRC rules.

Generally, yes. Outstanding basic pay, accrued holiday pay, and PILON are all taxed as normal earnings through PAYE, with Income Tax and National Insurance deducted as usual. Certain termination payments above £30,000, such as some redundancy payments, can be paid tax-free, but this calculator focuses on routine final pay rather than redundancy settlements.

There is no single legal deadline, but final pay is typically paid on the employer’s normal payroll date following your leaving date, as set out in your contract or company policy. If it is significantly delayed beyond your normal pay date, you can raise this with your employer or seek advice from ACAS.

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