Xanthia togata, the pink-barred sallow, is a species of moth of the family Noctuidae.
It is a Holarctic species, and is found throughout Europe and east through the Palearctic to Central Asia, and Siberia up to the Ussuri.
It was first described by the German entomologist Eugenius Johann Christoph Esper in 1788 from the type specimen in Germany Forewing deep yellow, the markings purplish brown; a blotch on costa beyond basal line; inner line wavy, interrupted; median shade curved, interrupted; outer line double, lunulate dentate, the space including median and outer lines shaded with purplish; orbicular stigma yellow, marked only by one or two reddish points; reniform yellow with its upper part slightly and its lower completely marked with purplish; the interval between the stigmata a purplish blotch; submarginal line indicated only by purplish spots; fringe yellow chequered with purplish; hindwing yellowish white, more yellow along termen, often showing a dark grey outer line; ochreago Bkh.
[Type] differs only in having a red central band instead of the purplish brown one, —in togata Esp.
[Type] the median and double outer lines remain clear without any dark suffusion.