National Minimum Wage and Living Wage UK 2026/27 — Rates and Rights

UK Minimum Wage and National Living Wage 2026 — Current Rates and Rules

Current UK minimum wage rates for 2026. National Living Wage, age bands, apprentices, and what to do if you're being underpaid.

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

Everyone deserves fair pay for their work. Here’s what you need to know about UK minimum wage rates, rules, and your rights.

Current Minimum Wage Rates

Rates typically change each April — check gov.uk for the most current figures

2025/26 Rates (From April 2025)

Age/CategoryHourly Rate
National Living Wage (21+)Check current rate
18-20Check current rate
Under 18Check current rate
ApprenticeCheck current rate

Always check gov.uk for the current rates as they change annually.

Historical Rate Increases

YearNational Living Wage (21+)18-20Under 18
April 2024£11.44£8.60£6.40
April 2023£10.42£7.49£5.28
April 2022£9.50£6.83£4.81
April 2021£8.91£6.56£4.62
April 2020£8.72£6.45£4.55

Rates have increased significantly over recent years, generally outpacing inflation.

Who Gets Which Rate?

By Age

Your AgeYou Get
21+National Living Wage (highest)
18-20National Minimum Wage (lower rate)
Under 18 (not apprentice)National Minimum Wage (youth rate)
Apprentice (first year)Apprentice rate (lowest)

Apprentice Rate Rules

You get the apprentice rate if:

  • You’re an apprentice under 19, OR
  • You’re 19+ and in the first year of apprenticeship

After the first year (or if you’re 19+ and past year one), you get the rate for your age.

When Your Rate Changes

SituationNew Rate Applies
Turn 18From first pay day after birthday
Turn 21From first pay day after birthday
Complete apprentice year 1From first pay day after anniversary
Annual April increaseFrom first pay day on/after 1 April

Types of “Living Wage”

There are three different things called “living wage” — don’t confuse them:

1. National Living Wage (Government)

FeatureDetails
Set byUK Government
Legal statusMandatory — employers must pay
Applies toWorkers 21+
Enforced byHMRC

2. National Minimum Wage (Government)

FeatureDetails
Set byUK Government
Legal statusMandatory — employers must pay
Applies toWorkers under 21 + apprentices
Enforced byHMRC

3. Real Living Wage (Voluntary)

FeatureDetails
Set byLiving Wage Foundation (charity)
Legal statusVoluntary — encouragement only
RatesHigher than government rates
London rateHigher again

The voluntary Real Living Wage is calculated based on what people need to live — it’s higher than the legal minimum. Employers displaying the “Living Wage Employer” logo pay this voluntarily.

Voluntary vs Mandatory Comparison

TypeUK RateLondon RateLegal?
National Living Wage~ £11-12/hrSameYes
Real Living Wage~ £12/hr~ £13/hrNo (voluntary)

Calculating Your Pay

Are You Getting Minimum Wage?

StepCalculation
1Total pay in pay period (before tax)
2Minus: tips, premium pay, benefits in kind
3Divide by hours worked
4Compare to minimum wage for your age

What Counts as Pay

Counts ✅Doesn’t Count ❌
Basic hourly/weekly payTips from customers
Incentive payPremium for overtime
Performance bonusesExpenses
CommissionBenefits in kind
Premium for unsocial hours
Pension contributions

Common Situations

ScenarioHow It Works
Salaried employeeSalary ÷ contracted hours
Variable hoursPay ÷ actual hours worked
Piece workMust average at least min wage
Sleep-insComplex — depends on work required

What Counts as Working Time

Time That Must Be Paid

ActivityMust Be Paid?
Regular work duties✅ Yes
Compulsory training✅ Yes
Travel between work sites✅ Yes
Waiting to be given work/at workplace✅ Yes
On-call at workplace✅ Yes
Security searches (compulsory)✅ Yes

Time That May Not Be Paid

ActivityMust Be Paid?
Travel to/from work❌ No
Lunch breaks❌ No (if not working)
On-call at home❌ No (unless called in)
Voluntary training❌ No

Deductions and Minimum Wage

What Employers Can Deduct

TypeCan Reduce Below MW?
Income taxYes (legal requirement)
National InsuranceYes (legal requirement)
Pension contributions (auto-enrolment)Yes
Court ordersYes
Agreed in contract (e.g., loans)No — can’t take below MW
Uniform/equipmentNo — can’t take below MW
Till shortagesNo — can’t take below MW

Uniform and Equipment

If your employer requires specific uniform or equipment:

  • They can require you to buy it
  • But your pay after deduction must still be at least minimum wage
  • Many employers provide uniforms free to avoid this issue

Your Rights

Zero-Hour Contracts

RightDetails
Minimum wageMust receive for all hours worked
Not required to accept hoursCan say no without penalty
Exclusivity bannedCan work for others
Notice of shiftsRequired in some cases

Part-Time Workers

RightDetails
Same hourly rateAs comparable full-time workers
Minimum wage protectionSame as all workers
Pro-rata benefitsHoliday, pension, etc.

Agency Workers

RightDetails
Minimum wageSomeone must pay it (agency or hirer)
After 12 weeksEqual treatment rights

If You’re Being Underpaid

Step 1: Check Your Pay

CheckHow
Your age on pay dayDetermines which rate
Hours workedCheck timesheets/records
DeductionsAre they legitimate?
Pay receivedTotal before tax

Use the government’s Minimum Wage Calculator to check.

Step 2: Raise It With Employer

ApproachScript
Informal first“I’ve calculated my pay and it seems below minimum wage — can we check this?”
Be factualShow your calculations
Keep recordsDocument conversations

Step 3: Formal Complaint

If informal doesn’t work:

ActionHow
Written grievanceUse company grievance procedure
Acas adviceFree, confidential advice
HMRC complaintThey investigate employers
Employment tribunalFor unpaid wages

Reporting to HMRC

What HappensDetails
Anonymous reportingYou can report anonymously
InvestigationHMRC investigates employer
Arrears paidEmployer ordered to pay back wages
PenaltiesEmployers face fines
Naming and shamingPublic list of offenders

Report online at gov.uk or call the Acas helpline.

Exempt Workers

Some workers are not entitled to minimum wage:

CategoryWhy Exempt
Self-employedNot employees (but check status)
Company directorsUnless also employees
VolunteersGenuine volunteers only
Unpaid family workersLiving in employer’s home
Armed forcesSeparate pay scales
Prisoners
Students on work placements (under 1 year)Part of education

Warning: Some employers wrongly classify people as self-employed or volunteers. If you’re told you’re not entitled but work regular hours with set duties, check your status.

Minimum Wage Annual Earnings

Full-Time (37.5 hours/week) Take-Home

At RateGross AnnualMonthly Take-Home*
£11.44/hr£22,308~£1,700
£12.00/hr£23,400~£1,760
£13.00/hr£25,350~£1,870

Approximate after tax/NI, no student loan

Hours Needed for Different Incomes

Target Monthly NetHours at NLW
£1,500~32 hours/week
£1,750~38 hours/week
£2,000~45 hours/week

Beyond Minimum Wage

Moving Up

StrategyHow
Gain experienceTime in role builds value
Get training/qualificationsIncreases earning potential
Ask for raisesHow to negotiate
Move to higher-paying sectorSome sectors pay more
Look for Living Wage employersVoluntary higher pay

Sectors That Typically Pay Above Minimum

Higher PayingLower Paying
FinanceHospitality
TechRetail
Healthcare (qualified)Care work
Construction (skilled)Agriculture
Professional servicesCleaning

Useful Resources

ResourceWhat It Does
gov.uk minimum wageOfficial rates and calculator
AcasFree employment advice
Citizens AdviceRights information
Living Wage FoundationVoluntary scheme info
HMRCReport underpayment

Key Takeaways

PointRemember
Minimum wage is lawEmployers must pay it
Rate depends on ageCheck you’re on correct rate
Changes in AprilCheck for annual increases
Tips don’t countMust be paid on top
Can’t deduct below MWFor things like uniforms
You can report anonymouslyHMRC investigates

Sources

  1. MoneyHelper — Everyday money