Healthcare · South East

Radiographer salary in Oxford, 2026

Median annual salary £45,200 based on ONS ASHE, South East regional adjustment
Lower quartile
£36,160
Upper quartile
£56,500
vs UK median
+13%
Open jobs (est.)
2
Radiographers in Oxford earn a median £45,200 per year — 13% above the UK average for the role, pulled up by commuter-belt employers and proximity to London. The middle 50% of earners sit between £36,160 and £56,500, and senior practitioners with a strong specialism push past £78,648. Pay rises are typically banded by experience rather than annual increment, so the route to higher earnings is changing employer or stepping up a level — not waiting for a cost-of-living adjustment.

Source: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings, 2025, adjusted for the South East regional pay differential. Updated 2026-04-21. Methodology.

Median
£31,640£73,450
Lower quartile£36,160
Median£45,200
Upper quartile£56,500

Radiographer salary by experience in Oxford

That headline median masks a wide spread once you split Oxford radiographers by years of experience. The four bands below reflect what each tier typically commands in Oxford — local figures, not UK averages, with each step usually triggered by a level change rather than an annual increment.

Experience level Salary range Median
Entry (0-2 yrs) £28,984 – £37,036 £33,010
Mid (3-5 yrs) £38,420 – £49,720 £44,070
Senior (6-10 yrs) £58,986 – £75,371 £67,179
Lead (10+ yrs) £77,829 – £106,503 £92,166
Cost-of-living adjusted: A £45,200 Radiographer salary in Oxford buys what £38,305 would buy at the UK average — that's 4% less real purchasing power than the national figure.

Gross figures only tell half the story — what actually lands in your bank account depends on tax, NI, student loan and pension. Run your own number below.

Take-home pay calculator · 2024/25

Radiographer, Oxford

£2,870take-home per month

£34,436/yr · £662/wk · effective rate 23.8%

Gross salary£45,200
Pension (5%)£2,260
Income tax£6,074
National Insurance£2,430
Net take-home£34,436

Earn more as a Radiographer

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Pay ranges and take-home are the planning numbers; what you can actually move into right now is a different question. Live radiographer vacancies in Oxford are below.

Open vacancies · via Reed

2 live Radiographer jobs in Oxford

Live listings refresh daily. View the full set on Reed.

See all Radiographer jobs in Oxford

It's also worth seeing how Oxford stacks up — both against the UK average and against other cities radiographers commonly relocate between.

Radiographer pay: Oxford versus UK average

Oxford
£45,200
UK average
£40,000

Radiographer pay across other UK cities

Oxford
£45,200
£51,200
£40,800
£39,200
£38,800

NHS Agenda for Change vs private-sector pay for Radiographers in Oxford

For NHS-employed staff in particular, the published pay tables only describe the basic-band figure; the true take-home includes layers the median figure can't capture.

For NHS-employed Radiographers in Oxford, pay follows Agenda for Change bands rather than market rates. That puts the median around £45,200, with the High Cost Area Supplement adding 5–20% on top inside the London commuter belt. Specialist add-ons, on-call rotas and unsocial-hours premia can lift effective annual pay by 15–30% above the headline band.

Private-sector and locum work is where pay flexes. Locum Radiographers in Oxford can clear the upper quartile (£56,500) on annualised earnings, but with no NHS pension accrual, no sick pay, and a heavier admin load. The pension calculation matters more than most Radiographers realise — the NHS scheme alone is worth roughly 20% of salary in employer contribution, which a private-sector base needs to clear before it's actually a pay rise.

Radiographer salaries in cities near Oxford

If Oxford doesn't quite work for the role — commute, rent, partner's job — the same role in nearby cities tells you what the trade-off looks like in £ terms. The four comparisons below show how pay shifts within the same region — multipliers come from the ONS regional median pay differential, so the figures already account for the regional gap.

Other healthcare jobs in Oxford

Adjacent healthcare roles often pay differently to radiographer for similar skill profiles, which is useful when you're choosing what to specialise in next. Salaries for closely related healthcare roles in Oxford are below — useful when comparing routes into or out of the Radiographer track.

Roles with overlapping skills

Common questions about radiographer pay in Oxford, answered with the underlying figures from the same dataset used above.

Frequently asked questions

What is the average Radiographer salary in Oxford?

£45,200 per year is the median Radiographer salary in Oxford, drawn from ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings data adjusted for the regional pay differential. Lower quartile sits at £36,160; upper quartile at £56,500.

How much does a Radiographer earn per month in Oxford?

About £3,767 gross, which works out at roughly £2,712 take-home after income tax and National Insurance for the 2024/25 tax year (assuming no student loan and a 5% pension contribution). Use the calculator above for a number that matches your own circumstances.

What is the starting salary for a Radiographer in Oxford?

Entry-level Radiographers in Oxford typically start between £28,984 and £37,036. Pay then steps up at the 3-year and 6-year marks — mid-level practitioners earn £38,420–£49,720, with senior roles reaching £58,986–£75,371.

Is Oxford a good place to work as a Radiographer?

Yes — strong on both pay and labour-market tightness. Oxford pays 13% above the UK Radiographer median, with major local employers including University of Oxford, Oxford Instruments, BMW Mini. Cost of living runs at 118 on the UK-100 index, so £45,200 here has the real purchasing power of £38,305 at the national average. Unemployment of 2.8% gives a useful read on how tight the local labour market is — under 4% generally favours candidates on pay.

What skills do Radiographers need to earn more?

Reaching the upper-quartile £56,500 band tends to come down to depth in MRI, CT, X-ray, plus a track record that lets you credibly take on senior or lead-level scope. Career outlook for the role is medium, so the speciality areas worth doubling down on are Patient care and HCPC registration.

Salary base figures: ONS Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings (2025), with regional adjustment from ONS regional median gross pay tables. Live job counts (where shown): Reed Jobseeker API, refreshed daily. Take-home calculations apply 2024/25 UK tax-year thresholds for England, Wales and Northern Ireland.