Glasgow is a large urban workforce of around 640k residents in Strathclyde, Scotland. Median full-time gross pay for the area sits near £32,800 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 0T W1 should look like on a Glasgow payslip. Because 0T W1 is an emergency or non-cumulative code, the impact on a single payslip can be sharper than the annual figures suggest. Scottish residents are normally on an S-prefixed code; if your Glasgow payslip shows 0T W1 without the S, double-check with HMRC that your address is up to date.
What does 0T W1 mean for Glasgow workers?
On a Glasgow payslip, 0T W1 usually means HMRC has not yet matched your current employment to your full year-to-date earnings. Glasgow payroll teams running Scottish residents on an English-prefixed version of this code is one of the most common payslip errors we see locally.
0T on a week-1 non-cumulative basis. Tax is calculated on the period in isolation with no personal allowance and no carry-forward of unused allowance from earlier in the year.