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Payslip Checker for Exeter on Tax Code D0

All income taxed at the higher rate of 40%. Tailored guidance for Exeter payroll on the UK 2026/27 PAYE bands.

Check your Exeter payslip in 30 seconds
Exeter, Devon

Exeter is a mid-sized urban economy of around 130k residents in Devon. Median full-time gross pay for the area sits near £28,200 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 Exeter payslip. Because D0 is a stable PAYE code, the monthly figures should be broadly consistent across the tax year. England uses the rest-of-UK PAYE bands, so the standard 20% / 40% / 45% rates apply alongside D0.

What does D0 mean for Exeter workers?

D0 applies a flat 40% to every pound under this employment. In Exeter, this is most often a second-job code — for example NHS bank shifts at a local trust on top of a substantive role. For most Exeter employees, D0 should appear in the same place on every payslip, with the deductions tracking smoothly month to month.

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.

Estimated take-home on D0 at Exeter’s median salary

Based on a median annual gross of £28,200 (ONS ASHE 2024 for Devon). Estimates use HMRC 2026/27 rates and ignore pension salary sacrifice, student loans and benefits-in-kind. Your actual pay may differ.

ComponentAnnualMonthly
Gross pay£28,200£2,350
Income tax−£11,280−£940
National Insurance−£1,250−£104
Net take-home£15,670£1,306

Effective tax + NI rate on this salary: 44.4%. Estimates based on ONS ASHE median earnings 2024 — your actual pay may differ.

Local context for Exeter

Exeter payslips use the rest-of-UK PAYE bands: 20% basic up to £50,270, 40% higher up to £125,140, then 45% additional above that. National Insurance for a category-A employee is 8% between the primary threshold and the upper earnings limit, then 2% above. Council tax is settled separately via your local authority and is not a payslip line.

Common payroll questions in Exeter

Should my Exeter payslip show tax code D0?
D0 should appear if your circumstances match what HMRC expects for this code (all income taxed at the higher rate of 40%.). On a typical Exeter salary of £28,200 you would expect roughly £940 of income tax per month under this code.
Why does my Exeter payslip differ from a colleague's on the same code?
Two Exeter colleagues on tax code D0 can still see different deductions because pension contributions, salary sacrifice, student loan plan, taxable benefits and overtime all sit alongside the tax code. The code only governs the income-tax line. Match the code first, then check pension and NI category, then the variable lines.
How does Exeter compare to other UK cities for D0 take-home?
Exeter's take-home tracks the rest-of-UK PAYE table directly. The same gross pay anywhere in England would yield the same income tax and NI; differences across cities come from local pay levels, not the tax code itself.
What should I do if D0 looks wrong on my Exeter payslip?
Start with your most recent payslip and your latest HMRC P2 coding notice. If the code on your payslip does not match the code on the P2, the employer is the right first call. If they match but the figure looks wrong, contact HMRC on 0300 200 3300 — your tax code is set by HMRC, not by your Exeter employer. You can also upload your payslip to PayslipIQ for a free instant breakdown.

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Disclaimer: PayslipIQ provides educational guidance only. It is not financial, tax, or legal advice. Figures are estimates based on the data you entered. Always verify against your employer's payroll, your HMRC personal tax account, or a qualified adviser before making decisions.