Affordability · London · 2026
Can I afford London
on £50,000?
Unsustainable solo. Rent would consume 62% of take-home pay. Shared housing is essential at this salary in London. Net take-home £3,293/month. Average 1-bed rent £2,050/month — a 62% rent-to-income ratio.
Net monthly
£3,293
after tax & NI
Rent (1-bed)
£2,050
per month
After rent
£1,243
per month
Stretched — shared housing strongly recommended
· 62% rent-to-income on £50,000
Three ways to live in London
Solo · 1-bed city centre
£2,050/mo
median 1-bed rent
RTI
62% — High pressure
Disposable after rent
£1,243/mo
Shared house · room
£1,150/mo
median room rent
RTI
35% — Stretched
Disposable after rent
£2,143/mo
Solo · outer London
£1,400/mo
outer area 1-bed rent
RTI
43% — Stretched
Disposable after rent
£1,893/mo
Coming soon: benchmark your salary anonymously
See how your salary compares to others in London. No name, no employer — just your role, city and salary.
Financial tools
Popular products for UK earners
Try other salaries in London
Can you afford £50,000 elsewhere?
Compare salaries in London
Frequently asked questions
Can I afford to live in London on £50,000? +
Unsustainable solo. Rent would consume 62% of take-home pay. Shared housing is essential at this salary in London. Your net take-home on £50,000 is £3,293/month.
With median 1-bed rent of £2,050/month, you'd have £1,243/month left
after rent — a 62% rent-to-income ratio.
A shared room at £1,150/month would reduce that ratio to 35%,
leaving £2,143/month disposable.
What salary do I need to comfortably afford London? +
To keep rent below 33% of take-home pay on a 1-bed flat in London
(average £2,050/month), you need approximately
£110,500 gross annual salary.
For a shared room (£1,150/month), the threshold drops to
£54,000. For an outer-area 1-bed (£1,400/month),
you need around £69,500.
Is London expensive to live in? +
London has a cost-of-living index of 100 (London = 100) and
an average 1-bed rent of £2,050/month. The most expensive major UK city for housing costs.
Council tax averages £165/month and
transport £185/month.
What is the rent-to-income ratio on £50,000 in London? +
On £50,000 in London, net take-home is £3,293/month.
With median 1-bed rent of £2,050/month, the rent-to-income ratio is
62%.
The widely accepted guideline for comfortable solo living is under 33%.
For a shared room the ratio falls to 35%;
for an outer-area 1-bed to 43%.