Teachers' pay

Teacher pay has been cut sharply in real terms since 2010, making pay uncompetitive and damaging teacher living standards. 

The pay cuts drive the recruitment and retention crisis and undermine the quality and stability of education.

Key facts

  • Teacher pay has fallen by 23% against RPI inflation since 2010.
  • Pay cuts for teachers have been deeper than for most other graduate professions, widening pay gaps with the wider economy.
  • The competitiveness of teacher pay has deteriorated to its lowest level since at least 1945.
  • Real-terms cuts, excessive workload and unfair performance-related pay are major reasons why teachers consider leaving the profession.
  • Unfair blocks to pay progression have restricted career opportunities, especially onto and on the Upper Pay Range.

Key statistics

Campaign asks

  • We need the Government to change its political choice to attack teacher pay and instead deliver on the promise of change it made when it was elected in 2024.
  • Instead of pay cuts and more teacher shortages we need fully funded, above inflation pay awards to properly value, recruit and retain the teachers our education service needs.
  • Ensure teacher pay is competitive with other graduate professions so that schools can recruit and retain the teachers they need.
  • Restore the value of pay progression so that experience and expertise are properly recognised across the pay structure.
  • End punitive and divisive performance-related pay and replace it with fair, transparent national pay frameworks.
  • Fund any pay increases through additional government investment, not cuts to school budgets.

Pay advice

Pay advice for teachers and support staff in schools and colleges.

Pay progression

All pay progression including onto and on the Upper Pay Range should be automatic and annual.

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