Belfast is a large urban workforce of around 350k residents in Northern Ireland. Median full-time gross pay for the area sits near £30,100 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 SD0 should look like on a Belfast payslip. Because SD0 is a stable PAYE code, the monthly figures should be broadly consistent across the tax year. Northern Ireland uses the same income-tax bands as England, so SD0 applies in the standard way; rates are settled separately through Land and Property Services rather than the payslip.
What does SD0 mean for Belfast workers?
SD0 applies a flat 21% to every pound under this employment. In Belfast, this is most often a second-job code — for example NHS bank shifts at a local trust on top of a substantive role. In Belfast, SD0 interacts with Northern Ireland's separately settled rates: PAYE on the payslip, regional and district rates billed elsewhere.
Scottish equivalent of D0. All income under this employment is taxed at the Scottish intermediate rate (21% in 2026/27). Most common on supplementary employments for Scottish taxpayers already in higher bands on their main job.