GP partner pay works completely differently from a salaried job, and it genuinely confuses people moving into partnership for the first time. Here’s how drawings, superannuation, and practice expenses actually convert into take-home pay.
Drawings, not salary
As a partner, you don’t receive a fixed salary — you draw an agreed amount monthly against your expected share of practice profit, then true up once annual accounts are finalised. Your actual take-home depends on the practice’s real profitability that year, not a guaranteed figure.
Superannuation still applies
GP partners remain part of the NHS Pension Scheme, contributing tiered rates based on total pensionable income — calculated slightly differently from salaried NHS pay but following the same underlying tier structure.
Tax treatment
Partnership income is taxed as self-employment — Income Tax plus Class 2 and Class 4 National Insurance through Self Assessment, not PAYE — which changes how and when you actually pay it compared with salaried NHS work.
Work out your own GP partner take-home with the Payslp GP Partner calculator.
Why partnership agreements matter for your actual take-home
Two partners with identical headline profit shares can end up with very different real take-home if the partnership agreement handles expenses, locum cover costs, or capital contributions differently — worth understanding your specific agreement in detail, not just the headline profit-share percentage.
Frequently asked questions
Do GP partners get sick pay?
Not in the way an employee does — as a partner, an extended absence typically affects your share of profit directly, which is one of the real financial risks partnership carries compared with salaried roles.
Can a GP partner also do locum work?
Depends on the partnership agreement — some allow it, others restrict it or require profit-sharing arrangements for any external income earned.