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TwitterThe median annual earnings for full-time employees in Northern Ireland was approximately 37,052 British pounds in 2025, compared with 34,232 pounds in the previous year. At the start of the provided time period, in 1999, the average full-time salary in Northern Ireland was 15,798 pounds per year, with median earnings exceeding 20,000 pounds per year in 2005, and 30,000 pounds by 2022.
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TwitterFrom April 1, 2024, doctors starting their first year of foundation training in Northern Ireland were paid a basic salary of ****** British pounds a year. Consultant salaries, on the other hand, started at ******* British pounds annually. The actual income depends on actual hours worked at night, weekend, on-call, working over ** hrs per week, or any other potential pay premium. General practitioners (GPs) can either be employed and are salaried GPs, or independent contractors in charge of their own practices as a business (alone or in partnerships).
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TwitterThis bulletin is the twelfth annual publication in respect of Northern Ireland Civil Service pay. The statistics relate to annual pay for the year ending March 2022, but also contains trend data for 10 years. Median pay is analysed, broken down by:
This release was originally published on 9 June 2022 with 2021 ONS and ASHE data. It has now been updated with 2022 ONS data (published on 13 October 2022) and ASHE data (published on 26 October 2022).
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Summarises salaries of staff, by grade level. Covers most recent year and the previous five years. Source agency: Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency Designation: Official Statistics not designated as National Statistics Language: English Alternative title: Pay statistics for the NICS
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TwitterPay statistics are presented by grade level and include comparisons to the rest of the UK and to the private sector. Analyses are based on staff salaries at the end of March each year and include comparisons with previous years. The report also includes breakdowns of pay by grade and age group, gender, community background, and disability.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Information on weekly incomes by family type, source of income, age, marital status, and employment status. Source agency: Social Development (Northern Ireland) Designation: National Statistics Language: English Alternative title: Individual Income Series Reports (Northern Ireland)
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Provides information on potential living standards, as determined by disposable income.
Source agency: Social Development (Northern Ireland)
Designation: National Statistics
Language: English
Alternative title: Households Below Average Income Reports (Northern Ireland)
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TwitterThis statistic displays the income breakdown of the Ulster branch of Table Tennis Ireland in Northern Ireland from 2015 to 2019, by source. In 2015, the association generated approximately **** thousand British pounds of income through coaching fees. More information about sports in Northern Ireland can be found in the Dossier: Sport in Northern Ireland.
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TwitterThe median annual earnings in the United Kingdom was 39,039 British pounds per year in 2025. Annual earnings varied significantly by region, ranging from 49,692 pounds in London to 34,403 pounds in the North East. Along with London, only South East England and Scotland had earnings above the UK average, at 39,983 pounds and 39,719 pounds respectively. Regional Inequality in the UK Various other indicators highlight the degree of regional inequality in the UK, especially between London and the rest of the country. Productivity in London, as measured by output per hour, was 26.2 percent higher than the UK average. By comparison, every other UK region, except the South East, fell below the UK average for productivity. In gross domestic product per head, London was also an outlier. The average GDP per head in the UK was just over 37,000 pounds in 2023, but for London it was almost 64,000 pounds. Again, the South East's GDP per head was slightly above the UK average, with every other region below it. Within London itself, there is also a great degree of inequality. In 2023, for example, the average earnings in Kensington and Chelsea were 964 pounds per week, compared with 675 pounds in Barking and Dagenham. Wages continue to grow in 2025 In March 2025, weekly wages in the UK were growing by around 5.6 percent, or 1.8 percent when adjusted for inflation. For almost two years, wages have grown faster than inflation after a long period where prices were rising faster than wages between 2021 and 2023. This was due to a sustained period of high inflation in the UK, which peaked in October 2022 at 11.1 percent. Although inflation started to slow the following month, it wasn't until June 2023 that wages started to outpace inflation. By this point, the damage caused by high energy and food inflation had led to the the worst Cost of Living Crisis in the UK for a generation.
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TwitterIn 2025, weekly earnings for full-time workers in London grew by 5.7 percent when compared with the previous year, with wages growing fastest in the United Kingdom in Northern Ireland at 7.4 percent.
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TwitterThe statistic displays the distribution of income of Disability Sports Northern Ireland in 2018/2019, by source. In 2018/2019, Disability Sports Northern Ireland generated *** percent of its income through organization of trainings.
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TwitterCC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
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Gender pay gap data, with year on year change and extended information (such as part-time mean and median, bonus & BIK info, etc. for Northern Trust. Data is available for 2022-2025 for most companies.
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TwitterThe HBAI uses household disposable incomes, adjusted for household size and composition, as a proxy for material living standards, or more precisely for the level of consumption of goods and services that people could attain given the disposable income of the household in which they live.
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TwitterThe Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) is a UK wide survey that provides a wide range of information on earnings and hours worked. The Office for National Statistics (ONS) carries out ASHE in Great Britain and it is carried out by the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) in Northern Ireland. ASHE replaced the New Earnings Survey (NES) from 2004, and ASHE comparisons are therefore only available on a consistent basis from that year onwards. The sample used comprises approximately 1% of all employees in Northern Ireland who were covered by Pay As You Earn (PAYE) schemes.
The survey information related to the pay-week (or other pay period if the employee was paid less frequently) which included 18th April 2018, the reference date for the latest survey. The results are therefore not necessarily representative of pay over a longer period. They do not take account of subsequent changes in rates of pay which have become effective since April or changes which have been introduced with retrospective effect since the survey returns were completed.
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TwitterThe Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (ASHE) is a UK wide survey that provides a wide range of information on hourly, weekly and annual earnings by gender, work pattern, industry and occupation including public and private sector pay comparisons.
This report presents provisional results from the pensions element of the 2021 Northern Ireland ASHE, which surveyed employee earnings for the pay-week (or other pay period if the employee was paid less frequently) that included 21st April 2021, the reference date for the latest survey.
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TwitterThis statistic shows the average income ratings in the United Kingdom in 2018, by region. Greater London had the highest rating for income in this year, compared with Northern Ireland, which had the lowest score. The four regions with the highest income scores were all located in Southern England while Northern England had two of the lowest scoring regions in this year (Yorkshire and the North East.)
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TwitterIn 1978, the Provisional IRA was the largest paramilitary organization during the Troubles in Northern Ireland, and some sources estimated the organization had an annual income of roughly one million British pounds. The IRA raised funds through a variety of illegal methods, with theft believed to have been responsible for more than half the money raised in 1978. A different, more recent source estimates that, in the 1970s, the IRA had an average annual income well over two million pounds, with money raised through bars and clubs (through skimming, illegal slot machines, or the sale of stolen alcohol and cigarettes) bringing in over one million pounds per year.
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TwitterThis report is the twelfth in the Northern Ireland Households Below Average Income Series and principally gives information on the income distribution in Northern Ireland for the period April 2012 to March 2013 using cross sectional data from the Department for Social Developmentās Family Resources Survey
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TwitterThe table only covers individuals who have some liability to Income Tax. The percentile points have been independently calculated on total income before tax and total income after tax.
These statistics are classified as accredited official statistics.
You can find more information about these statistics and collated tables for the latest and previous tax years on the Statistics about personal incomes page.
Supporting documentation on the methodology used to produce these statistics is available in the release for each tax year.
Note: comparisons over time may be affected by changes in methodology. Notably, there was a revision to the grossing factors in the 2018 to 2019 publication, which is discussed in the commentary and supporting documentation for that tax year. Further details, including a summary of significant methodological changes over time, data suitability and coverage, are included in the Background Quality Report.
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TwitterWritten and statistical evidence from the Health Departments for the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
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TwitterThe median annual earnings for full-time employees in Northern Ireland was approximately 37,052 British pounds in 2025, compared with 34,232 pounds in the previous year. At the start of the provided time period, in 1999, the average full-time salary in Northern Ireland was 15,798 pounds per year, with median earnings exceeding 20,000 pounds per year in 2005, and 30,000 pounds by 2022.