Swansea is a mid-sized urban economy of around 250k residents in South Wales. Median full-time gross pay for the area sits near £28,400 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 BR X should look like on a Swansea payslip. Because BR X is an emergency or non-cumulative code, the impact on a single payslip can be sharper than the annual figures suggest. Welsh residents normally see a C-prefixed code; BR X does not carry that prefix, so check whether HMRC has the right address for you.
What does BR X mean for Swansea workers?
On a Swansea payslip, BR X usually means HMRC has not yet matched your current employment to your full year-to-date earnings. Swansea employers occasionally drop the C prefix during payroll-system migrations, especially after staff move from England.
Combines the BR flat 20% rate with the X (week-1/month-1) emergency basis. Common during transitions between contracts where HMRC has not yet issued a cumulative code.