£15.00/hour on 40 Hours a Week UK 2026/27
At £15.00/hour working 40 hours/week, gross pay is £31,200 a year. After Income Tax and National Insurance, take-home is £25,984 annually - that is £2,165 a month, £12.49 net per hour after deductions. England rules, 2026/27.
Take-home pay
£24,580
16.0% effective tax rate Income Tax plus employee National Insurance as a percentage of your gross salary. Excludes pension, student loan, and HICBC.
- Monthly
- £2,048
- Weekly
- £473
- Daily
- £95
- Hourly
- £12.60
| Annual gross salary | £29,250 |
|---|---|
| Personal Allowance used | +£12,570 |
| Income Tax | −£3,336 |
| National Insurance | −£1,334 |
| Annual take-home | £24,580 |
Weekly and monthly breakdown
- Gross weekly: £600 (£15.00/hour × 40h).
- Gross annual: £31,200 (52 weeks).
- Annual take-home: £25,984 after Income Tax and NI.
- Monthly take-home: £2,165.
- Net hourly equivalent: £12.49/hour after PAYE deductions.
Your salary in context
ONS · HMRC · CPI
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Annual equivalent
£15.00/hour over 40h/week is a gross annual salary of £31,200.
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Net per hour
After Income Tax and NI you actually keep about £12.49 per hour worked — roughly £99.94 per day and £499.68 per week.
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Monthly take-home
Across a 12-month year that works out to around £2,165 a month.
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vs UK median hourly
The UK median full-time salary (£37,430) divided by a 37.5-hour week works out to about £19.19/hour. £15.00 is 22% below that.
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Above minimum wage
£15.00 is £2.29 above the April 2026 National Living Wage of £12.71/h (21+).
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Typical roles
An annualised salary of £31,200 is typical for: NHS Band 5 (nurse, physio), junior developer, HR advisor.
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Top tax band
At this rate your highest marginal income-tax band is the Basic rate at 20%.
Frequently asked questions
- How do you convert an hourly rate to an annual salary?
- We multiply hourly rate × hours per week × 52 weeks. The default is 37.5 hours (standard UK full-time); you can change this to match your contract.
- What is the UK National Minimum Wage?
- From April 2025 the National Living Wage (21+) is £12.21 an hour. Rates for 18-20 year-olds and apprentices are lower. See gov.uk for the latest schedule.
- Does the calculator account for unpaid leave?
- By default we use 52 weeks, i.e. you're paid every week of the year including annual leave. If you're term-time only (e.g. teaching or zero-hours), set a lower weeks-per-year value.
- Is the tax calculation identical to the salary calculator?
- Yes - we annualise your hourly rate to an equivalent gross salary and run the same UK PAYE calculation (Income Tax + NI + optional student loans + pension sacrifice).