As we mark International Women’s Day 2025, we’re launching our latest findings into the gender pay gap in education.
As a school leaders’ union, we have a responsibility to advocate for fair pay, challenge systemic inequalities and support our members in securing the recognition and remuneration they have earned. To effectively promote equality in our classrooms, we must reflect those values within our school structures.
What does the picture look like in England?
All data is taken from the School workforce in England statistics.
What is NAHT calling for?
NAHT believes more work needs to be done to tackle the gender pay gap (the difference between the average pay rate for men and the average pay rate for women) in education, in line with the original recommendations of our Closing the Gender Pay Gap in Education: A leadership imperative report.
This includes a series of calls on the government, including:
- To review the equality implications of the current pay system, including the immediate removal of performance-related pay
- To renew or replace the EDI Hub funding, discontinued by the government in 2020
- To provide greater support to help mitigate the systemic barriers to flexible working for all roles, including encouraging better sharing of caring responsibilities, eg paternal leave
- To improve their data monitoring to allow monitoring of other pay gaps, for example ethnicity or disability.
Our work to tackle the gender pay gap in education forms part of our broader policy and campaigning work on our members’ pay. Read more about our work on pay.
NAHT’s Women’s network
In November 2024, NAHT launched our Women’s Network to shape the union's work in tackling the exact same injustices displayed here. If you would like to get involved in our work to tackle the gender inequality, please join our Women’s Network.
Our report Closing the Gender Pay Gap in Education: A leadership imperative
In 2021, NAHT in partnership with ASCL, NGA and WomenEd, released a new report exploring the gender pay gap in the English education system.
The report, Closing the Gender Pay Gap in Education: A leadership imperative, was intended to inform debate and highlight areas where action may be needed to ensure that women leaders and educators are valued appropriately and equitably for the work that they do.
Each year since the report’s release, we use the Department for Education’s school workforce statistics to update our analysis, to see if there have been any changes and/or improvements.
Download the 2021 report in full.
Read our press release on the 2021 report here.
First published 07 March 2025