This is a very difficult question to answer with any sort of accuracy. It depends on things like number of sectors you do at your base, how much you pay towards your pension, whether you have finished your 6 months 90% pay etc.
What happens is easyjet pay you your salary, plus your sector pay (some of which is not taxed), plus other things like uniform allowance, to give you a gross figure before tax. The tax is then calculated on this figure and this would then normally be subtracted from the gross amount to give net pay.
However, easyjet's system is to then reduce your tax figure by approx £420 a month, and to then subract that amount from your gross pay. So you are paying £420ish less tax than you would otherwise.
Your loan repayment (if that's what you have) is completely separate from and nothing to do with easyjet. There is no requirement to take out a loan. All you have to do is give CTC £23,000. If you have that amount burning a hole in your pocket then great. Some people borrow it from bank of M&D, some from a bank which charges low interest rates, some from HSBC (not great) and some put it on their mortgage (even less great).
So if someone says they receive £2800 a month then that is the amount they receive in their bank. How much of that they then pay out to the local loan shark is up to them (or up to the shark!).
So to answer your question: it varies dramatically, especially since it is based so heavily on sector pay. £2800 in your bank account is quite low for a heavy month of working. You can expect a couple of hundred more at least if you're doing sixty sectors or so. More than £3000 in your bank fairly common, but as I said it depends on how much you work.
Last edited by abracadabra; 29th December 2006 at 17:59.