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BT boss bags pay rise despite £3.7bn cost-cutting drive

City PM Published Jun 11, 2026 Reviewed Jul 1, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
Allison Kirkby received a £5.58m pay package for the year to 31 March 2026, up from £2.49m the previous year.
5.58 £ · Allison Kirkby pay package2.49 £ · Allison Kirkby pay package previous year
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Citation-ready fact
The pay package included £1.1m in salary, pension and benefits, £1.08m in annual bonus and £3.25m from long‑term share awards.
1.1 £ · salary, pension and benefits1.08 £ · annual bonus3.25 £ · long‑term share awards
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Citation-ready fact
BT increased its cost‑saving target from £3bn to £3.7bn and extended the programme through to 2030.
3 £bn · cost‑saving target3.7 £bn · cost‑saving target
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BT has already delivered £1.5bn of annual savings.
1.5 £bn · annual savings delivered
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BT’s workforce fell by seven per cent over the past year to around 108,000 employees.
7 % · workforce reduction108000 employees · workforce size
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BT expects total headcount to fall to between 75,000 and 90,000 by the end of the decade.
75000 employees · expected headcount90000 employees · expected headcount
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BT reported revenue of £19.7bn for the year, down from £20.4bn, and pre‑tax profit rose eight per cent to £1.4bn.
19.7 £bn · revenue20.4 £bn · revenue previous year8 % · pre‑tax profit change1.4 £bn · pre‑tax profit
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Citation-ready fact
Management raised the overall savings target by a further £700m.
700 £m · overall savings target increase
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Citation-ready fact
Kirkby earned 49 per cent of the maximum available annual bonus opportunity after meeting a range of customer and transformation targets.
49 % · bonus earned
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Kirkby will receive a three per cent salary increase from June, her first since becoming chief executive in February 2024.
3 % · salary increase
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Citation-ready fact
Allison’s total remuneration includes the estimated value of long‑term share awards that will release over the next three years.
3 years · share award release period
spokesperson from the telecoms giant, spokesperson
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BT chief executive Allison Kirkby received a £5.6m pay package last year, more than double the £2.5m she earned a year earlier, as the telecoms giant accelerated a sweeping cost-cutting programme designed to strip billions from the business.

According to the, Kirkby was paid £5.58m for the year to 31 March 2026, up from £2.49m in the previous year.

The package included £1.1m in salary, pension and benefits, a £1.08m annual bonus and £3.25m from long-term share awards.

The rise comes as BT presses ahead with one of the largest restructuring programmes in UK plc, having recently increased its cost-saving target from £3bn to £3.7bn and extended the programme through to 2030.

The company has already delivered £1.5bn of annual savings and said its workforce had fallen by seven per cent over the past year to around 108,000 employees.

BT previously said it expected total headcount to fall to between 75,000 and 90,000 by the end of the decade as automation and AI reshape operations.

A spokesperson from the telecoms giant said: “For the first time, Allison’s total remuneration this year includes the estimated value of her long-term share awards, which will release over the next three years – and these have benefited from the significant increase in share price since Allison joined as Chief Executive in February 2024.”

BT has argued the cuts are helping fund a major overhaul of the business as it invests heavily in fibre broadband and new mobile infrastructure.

The group reported revenue of £19.7bn for the year, down from £20.4bn, while pre-tax profit rose eight per cent to £1.4bn.

It maintained guidance for improving cash generation over the coming years and recently unveiled a new shareholder returns policy.

In her annual report statement, Kirkby said BT had continued to transform “ahead of plan”, pointing to record fibre rollout and improving customer satisfaction.

The company said it had exceeded its original transformation objectives, prompting management to raise the overall savings target by a further £700m.

BT’s remuneration report showed Kirkby earned 49 per cent of the maximum available annual bonus opportunity after meeting a range of customer and transformation targets.

The group said bonus outcomes reflected progress on earnings, cash flow, customer satisfaction and cost-saving initiatives.

The company also disclosed that Kirkby will receive a three per cent salary increase from June, her first since becoming chief executive in February 2024.

The disclosure is likely to attract scrutiny from investors and unions alike, given the scale of BT’s ongoing restructuring efforts.

While the company has stressed that the latest round of savings will not increase the number of planned job cuts, it has indicated staffing levels are now likely to end up at the lower end of its previously announced workforce range.

BT has maintained that the transformation programme is essential to remain competitive as it battles customer losses and mounting pressure from alternative broadband providers, while simultaneously investing billions of pounds in the UK’s digital infrastructure.

Kirkby said recently that the company was “transforming ahead of plan, offsetting headwinds while successfully competing”, as BT seeks to balance network investment, shareholder returns and cost discipline.

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