Aberdeen is a mid-sized urban economy of around 200k residents in North-East Scotland. Median full-time gross pay for the area sits near £39,800 per year (ONS ASHE 2024), and most local employees see their PAYE deducted before they ever check the breakdown. This page focuses specifically on what tax code D0 should look like on a Aberdeen payslip. Because D0 is a stable PAYE code, the monthly figures should be broadly consistent across the tax year. Scottish residents are normally on an S-prefixed code; if your Aberdeen payslip shows D0 without the S, double-check with HMRC that your address is up to date.
What does D0 mean for Aberdeen workers?
D0 applies a flat 40% to every pound under this employment. In Aberdeen, this is most often a second-job code — for example NHS bank shifts at a local trust on top of a substantive role. Aberdeen payroll teams running Scottish residents on an English-prefixed version of this code is one of the most common payslip errors we see locally.
D0 is a flat 40% code, typically used on a second source of income when the main job already uses the basic-rate band. Every pound under this employment is taxed at the higher rate.