Tax code D0 explained
D0 โ all of this income is taxed at the higher rate (40%) with no tax-free allowance.
| What it sets (2026/27) | Value |
|---|---|
| Tax-free allowance | ยฃ0 โ no tax-free allowance |
| Standard allowance (1257L) | ยฃ12,570 a year |
| Income Tax on a ยฃ35,000 salary | ยฃ14,000/yr |
| vs the standard code | +ยฃ9,514/yr (+ยฃ793/mo) |
What to check
โ No allowance on what you've said is your main job. BR, D0 and D1 give no tax-free allowance โ normal for a second job or pension, but if this is your only or main job you're probably overpaying. Check HMRC has your P45 or starter declaration and ask them to review your code.
โน About ยฃ9,514/yr more tax than the standard code. At ยฃ35,000, this code takes roughly ยฃ793 a month more than 1257L would. Expected if you have benefits or an underpayment; if you don't, query it.
Build or check your tax code โSee it on your own salary
The figures above use a ยฃ35,000 example. Enter your real salary to see exactly what D0 does to your take-home โ or upload a payslip and let PayGlance check the code is being applied correctly.
Try it on your salary โ