Londoners need to earn more than £300,000 a year to be classed as rich, research shows 

Londoners need to earn more than £300,000 a year to be classed as rich, research shows

  • Workers need to make £300,000 a year to be in capital’s top one cent of earners
  • Outside of London the figure drops to £162,000 – £4,000 more than the PM
  • 300,000 people are in top one per cent, and pay over a quarter of all income tax

It takes a salary of more than £300,000 a year to be counted rich in London, an analysis of the country’s fattest pay packets found yesterday.

And to be seen as one of the top earners in his peer group, a middle-aged man in the capital has to make £700,000 a year, it said.

The scale of the salaries, bonuses and perks of the best-paid is ‘staggering’, the respected Institute for Fiscal Studies said, adding that its research showed ‘the extraordinary scale of the gulf between the merely well off and the very richest’.

The £300,000 figure is the salary needed to be among the top one per cent of income tax payers in London, the IFS said. It is almost twice as high as the £162,000 needed to join the one per cent of highest income tax payers across the rest of the country.

It takes a salary of more than £300,000 a year to be counted rich in London, an analysis of the country’s fattest pay packets found yesterday (stock phot)

The high pay gap is such that a member of the biggest earning group – a man aged between 45 and 54 – would be in the top one per cent in the country on £162,000, but that pay packet would put him outside the top five per cent in London.

To be in the top one per cent in the capital, he would need to make more than £700,000 a year. 

Researchers at IFS based their study on the self-assessment tax forms demanded by Revenue and Customs from anyone who earns more than £100,000 a year.

Their report said that, nationally, just over 300,000 people make enough to be in the top one per cent, and that they pay more than a quarter of all income tax.

The high pay gap is such that a member of the biggest earning group – a man aged between 45 and 54 – would be in the top one per cent in the country on £162,000, but that pay packet would put him outside the top five per cent in London (stock photo)

The high pay gap is such that a member of the biggest earning group – a man aged between 45 and 54 – would be in the top one per cent in the country on £162,000, but that pay packet would put him outside the top five per cent in London (stock photo)

One in three of the highest earners are business owners or partners in large concerns, the report said, and others are City workers such as hedge fund managers.

The top group also includes senior accountants and lawyers – one large accountancy business paid its partners on average more than £600,000 last year, and one London law firm pays £100,000 a year even to newly-qualified solicitors.

Medical professionals are also among the top one per cent, and the best-paid include GPs, some of whom are said to earn up to £700,000 a year.

The pay scales dwarf the salary paid to the Prime Minister, who can claim £158,754 a year. Report author Robert Joyce said: ‘The highest-income people are very over-represented in the country’s south east corner, most of them are men, and many are in their 40s and 50s.’

Women were less likely to be high earners and someone on £100,000 a year can count herself in the top one per cent of high-paid women nationally.

 

Read more at DailyMail.co.uk