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

£21 an Hour Is How Much a Year? UK Annual Salary (2026/27)

£21 per hour works out to £40,950 a year full-time at 37.5 hours per week. Here's your exact take-home pay after tax and National Insurance, plus monthly and weekly breakdowns for 2026/27.

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

At £21 an hour, you cross the £40,000 annual salary milestone working standard full-time hours. Here’s what this means for your annual income and actual take-home pay after tax in 2026/27.


£21 an Hour: Annual Salary by Hours Worked

Weekly hoursAnnual grossMonthly grossWeekly gross
20 hours£21,840£1,820£420
30 hours£32,760£2,730£630
35 hours£38,220£3,185£735
37.5 hours£40,950£3,413£787.50
40 hours£43,680£3,640£840

Standard full-time: 37.5 hrs/week × 52 weeks = £40,950 per year.


Take-Home Pay at £21 an Hour — 37.5hr Week (2026/27)

ElementAmount
Gross annual salary£40,950
Personal Allowance−£12,570
Taxable income£28,380
Income tax (20%)−£5,676
National Insurance (8%)−£2,270
Net annual take-home£33,004
Monthly take-home£2,750
Weekly take-home£635

NI: 8% on (£40,950 − £12,570) = £28,380 × 8% = £2,270.40. All income remains within the basic rate band — the higher-rate threshold is £50,270.


At 40 Hours Per Week (£43,680/year)

ElementAmount
Gross annual£43,680
Income tax (20%)−£6,222
National Insurance (8%)−£2,489
Net annual£34,969
Monthly net~£2,914

How £21/hr Compares to UK Pay Benchmarks

RateAnnual (37.5hr)Context
National Living Wage£12.21/hr = £23,810Legal minimum (21+)
Real Living Wage£12.60/hr = £24,570Voluntary pledge
London Living Wage£13.85/hr = £27,008London benchmark
UK median salary~£16.80/hr = ~£35,000You are above the median
Your rate: £21.00/hr£40,950Top 40% of earners
Higher-rate threshold~£25.79/hr = £50,270Still in basic rate band

Who Earns £21 an Hour?

£21/hr is a professional-level wage. Common roles:

  • Education: Experienced schoolteachers (main scale M4–M6), further education lecturers
  • Healthcare: NHS Band 6 nurses, specialist healthcare practitioners
  • IT: Systems administrators, software developers at junior/mid level, IT project coordinators
  • Finance: Part-qualified accountants (ACCA/CIMA student), finance analysts
  • HR: Experienced HR advisers, payroll managers at mid-level
  • Construction: Site supervisors, experienced project managers in smaller firms
  • Legal: Legal executives, paralegals at senior level
  • Engineering: Technician engineers, quality assurance specialists

Income Percentile: Where Does £40,950 Sit?

£40,950/year places you in approximately the 60th–62nd income percentile for individual UK earners. You earn more than roughly 60% of all UK workers. This represents a genuinely above-average salary, particularly outside London and the South-East.

Your effective overall tax rate (income tax + NI combined) is approximately 19.4% — the Personal Allowance significantly reduces your effective burden below the headline 20% rate.


Student Loan Deductions at £40,950

Loan planRepayment thresholdDeduction at £40,950
Plan 1 (pre-2012)£24,9909% × £15,960 = £1,436/year (£120/month)
Plan 2 (2012–2023)£27,2959% × £13,655 = £1,229/year (£102/month)
Plan 5 (2023+)£25,0009% × £15,950 = £1,436/year (£120/month)
Postgraduate Loan£21,0006% × £19,950 = £1,197/year (£100/month)

All loan plans are in repayment. If you hold both an undergraduate and postgraduate loan, deductions are taken simultaneously — you could be repaying over £200/month in student loans at this salary.


Pension Contribution Impact

ContributionGross annualNet annual cost (after 20% relief)Pension pot monthly
5% employee£2,048/year£1,638 net~£270/month (incl. 3% employer)
8% employee£3,276/year£2,621 net~£325/month

Employer minimum auto-enrolment contribution (3%) adds around £820/year to your pension automatically.


Pay Progression from £21/hr

Hourly rateAnnual (37.5hr)Monthly netContext
£20.00/hr£39,000~£2,660Just below £40k
£21.00/hr£40,950£2,750Current — above £40k
£22.00/hr£42,900~£2,867Comfortable professional wage
£24.00/hr£46,800~£3,101Approaching £50k territory
£25.00/hr£48,750~£3,196Close to higher-rate threshold
£25.79/hr£50,270~£3,228Higher-rate tax threshold begins

Each additional £1/hr at this level adds approximately £1,950 gross and £1,365 net (after 20% tax and 8% NI).


Sources

  1. GOV.UK — Income Tax rates 2026/27
  2. HMRC — National Insurance contributions
  3. ONS — Annual Survey of Hours and Earnings 2025