snapcalcs

£15 per hour — annual salary and take-home pay

Based on 37.5 hrs/week · 2026/27 tax year
Annual salary
£29,250
gross per year
Monthly take-home
£2,048
after tax & NI
Weekly take-home
£473
after tax & NI
2026/27 tax breakdown
Gross salary£29,250
Income tax£3,336
National Insurance£1,334
Take-home pay£24,580

Based on 2026/27 England, Wales & Northern Ireland tax rates. Assumes standard tax code 1257L, no student loan, no pension contributions. Scotland has different income tax bands.

PeriodGrossTake-home
Per hour£15.00£12.60
Per day£112.50£94.54
Per week£562.50£472.68
Per month£2,437.50£2,048.30
Per year£29,250.00£24,579.60
Try a different amount
Use the salary converter to calculate any hourly rate, day rate, or annual salary.
Salary converter

How this is calculated

£15 per hour is a typical UK rate for skilled trades, junior administrative roles, experienced customer-service work, and early-career professional jobs. It’s above the Real Living Wage of £13.45 and covers a comfortable standard of living outside the most expensive areas of the South East.

On a gross annual salary of £29,250, HMRC deducts £3,336 in income tax and £1,334 in employee National Insurance for 2026/27 — leaving a take-home of £24,580 per year, or roughly £2,048 per month.

The first £12,570 of income is tax-free (the personal allowance). Earnings between £12,571 and £50,270 are taxed at 20%; between £50,271 and £125,140 at 40%; and above £125,140 at 45%. Employee National Insurance is 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270 and 2% above that.

Working 40 hours vs 37.5 hours

These figures assume a 37.5-hour working week. At 40 hours per week the annual gross rises to £31,200. After tax and NI the take-home at 40 hours is approximately £25,984 per year.

Questions about £15 per hour

£15 per hour is £29,250 per year gross, based on a 37.5-hour working week and 52 weeks a year (1,950 hours per year). At 40 hours per week the annual equivalent is £31,200.

Other useful calculators