Net Income
Net income, often called take-home pay, is what remains after taxes and deductions are removed from your gross earnings. It is the real amount that reaches your account and the only sensible basis for a budget. Building your spending and saving plans around net rather than gross income prevents the common mistake of committing money that was never actually yours to spend.
Related terms
Gross income is your total earnings before any taxes, pension contributions, or other deductions are taken out. It is the headline figure on a job offer or payslip, but it overstates what you can actually spend. Comparing gross income with the smaller net amount that lands in your account explains where a chunk of your pay goes and why budgets should be built on net figures.
Disposable income is the money left from your earnings after taxes and mandatory deductions, the amount you actually have available to spend or save. It sets the ceiling for your entire budget, so knowing it accurately matters. Comparing disposable income against your planned outgoings reveals whether your lifestyle fits your means or quietly relies on credit to bridge the gap.
Income is the money you receive from work, benefits, investments, or other sources over a period. It is the fuel for every budget, since spending and saving plans only make sense relative to what comes in. Logging each income source in your tracker, including irregular or side earnings, gives a complete picture of your inflows and supports realistic planning.
Learn more
Track it in real life
See how eTrackly's wallets, budgets and goals put concepts like this into practice — privately, on your own device.
Explore the app