Corrections

22 March 2022

Ongoing quality assurance identified a processing error relating to the dataset “The effects of taxes and benefits on household income, disposable income estimate” for financial year ending 2020. This primarily affected the wages and salaries component of original income, however a range of values across published tables have been impacted

After correcting this error, “Average household income, UK: financial year 2020” headline statistics show a revised household disposable income of £30,500 (up from the previously reported £29,900). 2019 timeseries data in this release were also impacted, with a revised household disposable income of £29,300 (down from the previously reported £29,900). Headline statistics for “Household income inequality, UK: financial year 2020” show a revised Gini coefficient of 35.4% (down from 36.3%). 2019 timeseries data in this release were also impacted, with a revised Gini coefficient of 36.0% (up from 35.5%). We apologise for the inconvenience caused.

25 January 2023

An error has been identified in Table 10 impacting the Gini coefficient for FYE 2022 in this table only. This has since been corrected.

18 July 2023

An error has been identified in Table 31, where the consumer prices index including owner-occupiers’ housing costs (CPIH) was incorrect for 1977-1980, impacting timeseries data in Tables 1,2,3,5,6, and 28. This has since been corrected.

21 August 2024

Ongoing quality assurance identified an error in the underlying survey microdata relating to the dataset “The effects of taxes and benefits on household income: disposable income estimate” for financial year ending 2022. An error was identified in self-employment income and cash benefits microdata, impacting a range of published tables. After correcting this minor error, revised UK household disposable income remains within 0.3% of previously reported values. “Average Household Income, UK, financial year ending 2022” headline statistics show a revised median household income of £32,400 (up from the previously reported £32,300) and “Average Household Inequality, UK, financial year ending 2022” show a revised Gini coefficient for disposable income of 35.5% (originally reported as 35.7%). We apologise for any inconvenience, data tables and main points have now been corrected.

About this Dataset

Average UK household incomes taxes and benefits by household type, tenure status, household characteristics and long-term trends in income inequality.

Edition in this dataset

Financial year ending 2023 edition of this dataset

Financial year ending 2022 edition of this dataset

Previous versions of this data are available.

Financial year ending 2021 edition of this dataset

Financial year ending 2020 edition of this dataset

Previous versions of this data are available.

Financial year ending 2019 edition of this dataset

Financial year ending 2018 edition of this dataset

Financial year ending 2017 edition of this dataset

Previous versions of this data are available.

Financial year ending 2016 edition of this dataset

Previous versions of this data are available.

Financial year ending 2015 edition of this dataset

Contact details for this dataset

Household Income and Expenditure team
hie@ons.gov.uk
+44 3456 013034