UK Poverty Line Calculator
Calculate if your household income meets the UK poverty threshold and Minimum Income Standard for 2025
What This Means for You
How to Use This Calculator
Getting started is straightforward. First, select your household composition from the dropdown menu. The options cover everything from single adults to families with multiple children, as well as pensioner households.
Next, enter your weekly household income. This should be your total take-home income after tax and National Insurance deductions. If you’re paid monthly, simply divide your monthly income by 4.33 to get the weekly amount. For annual salaries, divide by 52.
The “After Housing Costs” option is ticked by default because this gives a more accurate picture of your living situation. Housing costs vary enormously across the UK, so measuring poverty after accounting for rent or mortgage payments shows what you actually have left to live on. However, you can untick this if you want to see the “Before Housing Costs” comparison.
How Poverty Thresholds Are Calculated
The UK poverty line isn’t an arbitrary number someone plucked from thin air. It’s calculated as 60% of the median household income across the country. This is called “relative poverty” because it measures your income relative to what’s typical in society right now.
Here’s how it works: the government collects income data from thousands of households through the Households Below Average Income survey. They find the median (the middle point where half earn more and half earn less), then calculate 60% of that figure. This threshold is adjusted for different household sizes because obviously a family of four needs more income than a single person.
The “After Housing Costs” measurement deducts rent, mortgage payments, buildings insurance, and water charges from household income before making the comparison. This matters enormously because someone paying £1,500 monthly rent in London has far less disposable income than someone paying £500 in Newcastle, even if their gross income is the same.
The Minimum Income Standard Explained
Whilst the poverty line is a statistical threshold, the Minimum Income Standard (MIS) takes a different approach. Researchers at Loughborough University work with ordinary members of the public to build detailed household budgets. Groups of people discuss and agree what items and activities are needed for an acceptable standard of living in Britain today.
These aren’t luxury items. We’re talking about things like being able to afford a winter coat, having an internet connection, being able to invite friends round for a meal, or taking children on a school trip. The budgets are costed annually and updated for inflation.
For 2025, a single working-age adult needs £30,500 gross annual income (about £587 weekly) to reach MIS. A couple with two children needs £74,000 between them (about £1,423 weekly). These figures are significantly higher than the poverty thresholds because they represent what people actually need for a decent life, not just the statistical poverty line.
Different Poverty Measures Compared
| Measure | What It Shows | How It’s Calculated |
|---|---|---|
| Relative Poverty | Whether your income is below 60% of the current median | Changes annually based on median income for that year |
| Absolute Poverty | Whether your income is below 60% of 2010/11 median (adjusted for inflation) | Fixed baseline from 2010/11, only increases with inflation |
| Minimum Income Standard | Income needed for acceptable living standard based on public consensus | Detailed household budgets built by public groups, updated annually |
| Destitution | Extreme poverty where essentials are unaffordable | Income below £95 weekly for single adult or lacking 2+ essentials |
Frequently Asked Questions
Regional Variations Across the UK
Poverty isn’t evenly distributed. London has high poverty rates (27% after housing costs) despite having the highest average incomes, because housing costs are astronomical. The North East, Wales, and Northern Ireland also have above-average poverty rates. Meanwhile, the South East outside London has lower rates.
The Minimum Income Standard varies by region too. Living costs in inner London can be 30-40% higher than in other UK regions. A single adult in inner London needs around £396 weekly after housing costs to reach MIS, compared to £320 in much of the rest of the UK. This calculator uses UK-wide averages, so your local situation may differ.
Recent Policy Changes Affecting Poverty
April 2025 brought significant changes. The National Living Wage increased to £12.21 per hour, a 6.7% rise that helps low-paid workers. However, Local Housing Allowance was frozen, pushing an estimated 20,000 private renters into poverty. The two-child benefit limit, which prevents families claiming child tax credits for third and subsequent children born after April 2017, remains controversial and is estimated to affect 1.6 million children.
Pensioner poverty received attention when the Winter Fuel Payment was means-tested in 2024, removing the benefit from around 10 million pensioners. Following criticism, eligibility was expanded in June 2025 to include all pensioners with income below £35,000 annually, though this still excludes many who previously received it universally.