User:Stats evzyt/sandbox

Taxable income
According to the Office for National Statistics the median gross weekly earnings before tax for full-time employees in April 2013 was £517. Median hourly earnings excluding overtime for full-time employees were £13.03 over the same period, whilst the median gross annual salary, for a full time employee who had been in the same job for at least 1 year was £27,000, 2013 Statistical Bulletin.

According to OECD statistics after tax, the average British family in 2009 was left with an average of 26,904 USD in disposable income, compared with 28,310 USD for the average French family, 28,799 USD for the average German family, 22,847 USD for the average Spanish family, and 24,216 USD for the average Italian family. This represents a significant fall in the UK’s position when compared to 2002. In 2003, the median wage was £20,000. In 2006, average gross hourly pay for full-time and part-time men and women in the UK as a whole was £12.50 an hour. In 2011, average individual earnings for full-time workers in Britain were £26,000 (dropping to £21,000 when part-time workers are included), while the average income for working-age households was around £33,000. That same year, the after-tax earnings of the median household was around £26,000 per annum while average net household income (after tax) stood at £38,547.

In 2012, the real adjusted gross disposable income of households per capita in PPS in the United Kingdom was £21,376. In 2011, the average household net-adjusted disposable income was 25,828 USD per annum,

In the European Union in 2006, the highest gross hourly wage was recorded in Denmark, with 22.38 Euros, followed by Ireland and the United Kingdom where average earnings were respectively 20.83 Euros and 19.47 Euros per hour.

In 2009, 20.6% of full-time employees were estimated to be low-paid, defined by the OECD as earning less than two-thirds of the national gross median hourly full-time wage.

According to an annual survey from 2012, the UK standard of living in 2011 was 18% higher than the European average.

Data from HMRC 2004–2005; incomes are before tax for individuals. The personal allowance or income tax threshold was £4,745 (people with incomes below this level did not pay income tax). The mean income was £22,800 per year with the average Briton paying £4,060 in income tax.

Percentile points for income of individuals before tax
For tax years 1999-00 to 2012–13 except 2008–09.

Income distribution across age bands 2004-5
Source for tax year 2004–05. To estimate for 2010–11, increase by 22% to allow for inflation.

Median Weekly Earnings across UK regions 2013

 * Office for National Statistic 2013

An interactive map of earnings across the UK can be found on the neighbourhood statistics website

An annual equivalent

Income distribution by job type
Median earnings between different job types in 2013 can be seen here.

Further information can be obtained from the 2013 Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE)