Hourly to Salary Converter UK 2026/27 — Annual Pay, Take-Home and NMW Guide

£15 an Hour Is How Much a Year? UK Annual Salary (2026/27)

£15 per hour works out to £29,250 a year full-time. See your exact take-home pay after income tax and National Insurance, monthly and weekly breakdowns, and which jobs pay £15 an hour in the UK in 2026.

Salary and income data is based on ONS and other official UK statistical sources. Figures are averages and may not reflect your individual circumstances.

£15 per hour is a meaningful step up from the minimum wage and is often described as a living wage benchmark for many workers. Here’s what it means for your actual take-home pay in 2026/27.


£15 an Hour: Annual Salary by Working Hours

Weekly hoursAnnual grossMonthly grossWeekly gross
20 hours£15,600£1,300£300
25 hours£19,500£1,625£375
30 hours£23,400£1,950£450
35 hours£27,300£2,275£525
37.5 hours£29,250£2,438£562.50
40 hours£31,200£2,600£600

Standard full-time at 37.5 hours/week = £29,250 per year. This is used throughout.


Take-Home Pay at £15 Per Hour (2026/27)

37.5 Hours Per Week — £29,250 Gross

ElementAmount
Gross annual salary£29,250
Personal Allowance (tax-free)−£12,570
Taxable income£16,680
Income tax at 20%−£3,336
National Insurance at 8%−£1,334
Net annual take-home£24,580
Monthly take-home£2,048
Weekly take-home£473
Daily take-home (5-day)£95

NI: 8% × (£29,250 − £12,570) = 8% × £16,680 = £1,334.


40 Hours Per Week — £31,200 Gross

ElementAmount
Gross annual£31,200
Income tax (20%)−£3,726
National Insurance (8%)−£1,490
Net annual£25,984
Monthly net~£2,165

Where £15/hr Sits in the Pay Spectrum

BenchmarkHourlyAnnual (37.5hr)
National Living Wage (21+, 2026)£12.21£23,810
Real Living Wage (outside London)£12.60£24,570
London Living Wage (2026)£13.85£27,008
Your rate£15.00£29,250
UK median hourly pay (ONS, 2025)~£16.80~£32,760

At £15/hr you are:

  • 23% above the National Living Wage
  • 8.3% above the London Living Wage
  • 10.7% below the UK median hourly pay

Is £29,250 a Good Salary?

An annual salary of £29,250 places you at approximately the 42nd–44th income percentile for individual UK earners. Roughly 55% of workers earn more, 45% earn less.

Practical context:

  • Outside London: This is a comfortable single-person income in most UK regions — enough to rent privately, run a car, and save modestly
  • In London: £15/hr is tight. Average private rent in London is ~£2,100/month vs a take-home of ~£2,048 — mathematically difficult without financial support or a very cheap living situation
  • As a household: If both adults earn £15/hr, combined take-home is ~£4,100/month — genuinely comfortable in most UK cities

Jobs Paying Around £15 Per Hour

Healthcare (NHS):

  • Band 4 roles: pharmacy technicians, clinical admin officers, therapy support workers
  • Dental nurses (experienced)

Trades:

  • Employed plumbers and gas engineers (entry to mid)
  • Electricians in the early years
  • HGV drivers (Class 2)

Technology:

  • First-line IT support (experienced), helpdesk agents
  • Junior data analysts

Office and public sector:

  • PA/executive assistants in mid-market firms
  • Local authority officers (grade 5–6)
  • FE teachers on hourly contracts

Education support:

  • Higher Level Teaching Assistants (top of scale)
  • School business coordinators

Student Loan Repayments at £29,250

Loan planThresholdAnnual deductionMonthly
Plan 1 (pre-2012)£24,990£390£32.50
Plan 2 (2012–2023)£27,295£176£14.67
Plan 5 (2023+)£25,000£383£31.92
Postgrad loan£21,000£495£41.25

If you have a Plan 2 loan, you’ll now be making small repayments — this begins as soon as you earn above £27,295.


Effect of 5% Pension Contribution

At £29,250/year, auto-enrolment applies (above the £10,000 trigger):

Without pensionWith 5% pension
Annual gross salary£29,250£29,250
Pension contribution£0£1,463
Employer adds (3%)£0£878
Net take-home per year£24,580~£22,994
Monthly net£2,048~£1,916
Total pension pot growth/year£0~£2,341

The roughly £132/month reduction in take-home builds a pension pot growing at ~£195/month including the employer. The employer’s 3% contribution is essentially free money.


Hourly Rate Progression

RateAnnual (37.5hr)Monthly netProgress from £15
£15.38/hr£29,988~£2,098Crosses £30k
£16.00/hr£31,200~£2,165+6.7%
£17.00/hr£33,150~£2,282+13.3%
£18.00/hr£35,100~£2,399+20%

Each £1/hr pay rise adds £1,950 to annual gross and roughly £115 to monthly net take-home at this income level.


Sources

  1. GOV.UK — National Minimum Wage and National Living Wage rates
  2. HMRC — Income Tax rates and allowances
  3. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2025