Income & Employment Guides UK — Maximise Your Earnings

£10 an Hour Is How Much a Year? UK Annual Salary (2026/27)

£10 per hour works out to £19,500 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.

A pay rate of £10 an hour is below the National Living Wage for workers aged 21+, but it may apply to younger workers or certain apprenticeship stages. Here’s exactly what it translates to annually and how much you’d take home after tax.


£10 an Hour: Annual Salary by Hours Worked

Weekly hours Annual gross Monthly gross Weekly gross
20 hours £10,400 £867 £200
30 hours £15,600 £1,300 £300
35 hours £18,200 £1,517 £350
37.5 hours £19,500 £1,625 £375
40 hours £20,800 £1,733 £400

Standard full-time: 37.5 hrs/week × 52 weeks = £19,500 per year.


Take-Home Pay at £10 an Hour — 37.5hr Week (2026/27)

Element Amount
Gross annual salary £19,500
Personal Allowance −£12,570
Taxable income £6,930
Income tax (20%) −£1,386
National Insurance (8%) −£554
Net annual take-home £17,560
Monthly take-home £1,463
Weekly take-home £338

NI: 8% on (£19,500 − £12,570) = £6,930 × 8% = £554.40. The Upper Earnings Limit is £50,270 — this rate is well inside the 8% band.


At 40 Hours Per Week (£20,800/year)

Element Amount
Gross annual £20,800
Income tax (20%) −£1,646
National Insurance (8%) −£658
Net annual £18,496
Monthly net ~£1,541

How £10/hr Compares to UK Pay Standards

Rate Annual (37.5hr) Context
Apprentice NMW (year 1) £7.55/hr = £14,723 Legal minimum for apprentices
NMW age 18–20 £10.00/hr = £19,500 Your rate — legal minimum for 18–20s
NMW age 21+ (NLW) £12.21/hr = £23,810 You are below this if aged 21+
Real Living Wage £12.60/hr = £24,570 Voluntary employer pledge
London Living Wage £13.85/hr = £27,008 Recommended for London workers
UK median hourly pay ~£16.80/hr = ~£32,760 ONS figure — £10/hr is 40% below median

Important: If you are aged 21 or over and being paid £10/hr, your employer may be breaking the law. You can report underpayment of NMW to HMRC.


Who Earns £10 an Hour?

£10/hr is the current National Minimum Wage for workers aged 18–20. Common roles:

  • Retail: Sales assistants, cashiers (under-21s in supermarkets and clothing stores)
  • Hospitality: Waiters, kitchen porters, bar staff (younger workers)
  • Food service: Fast food crew, café servers, baristas in training
  • Warehousing: Entry-level pickers and packers (under-21 rates)
  • Care: Some care home positions for newly qualified younger workers
  • Cleaning: Commercial and domestic cleaners starting out

For workers aged 21+, this rate would be unlawful as it falls below the £12.21/hr National Living Wage. If you are over 21 and paid £10/hr, contact ACAS or report to HMRC.


Income Percentile: Where Does £19,500 Sit?

£19,500/year places you in approximately the 15th–20th income percentile for individual UK earners. This means roughly 80–85% of UK workers earn more. It is above the income tax Personal Allowance of £12,570 and will attract modest tax and NI contributions.

It is above the absolute poverty threshold for a single person but well below what most financial benchmarks define as a “living wage” in most UK cities.


Student Loan Deductions at £19,500

Loan plan Repayment threshold Deduction at £19,500
Plan 1 (pre-2012) £24,990 £0 — below threshold
Plan 2 (2012–2023) £27,295 £0 — below threshold
Plan 5 (2023+) £25,000 £0 — below threshold
Postgraduate Loan £21,000 £0 — below threshold

No student loan repayments are required at this salary level. If your income rises above £21,000 in future, Postgraduate Loan repayments begin first (6%).


Pension Auto-Enrolment at £19,500

Auto-enrolment applies from £10,000/year, so you would be enrolled if working full-time at this rate.

Contribution Monthly cost to you (net) Monthly pension pot grows by
5% employee + 3% employer ~£58/month ~£130/month total
8% employee + 3% employer ~£93/month ~£163/month total

Basic rate tax relief (20%) reduces the real cost of your contributions. A 5% contribution on £19,500 costs approximately £65/month gross but only ~£52 net of tax relief.


Pay Progression from £10/hr

Hourly rate Annual (37.5hr) Monthly net Context
£10.00/hr £19,500 £1,463 Current (18–20 NMW)
£11.00/hr £21,450 £1,580 +10%, above postgrad threshold
£12.00/hr £23,400 £1,697 Near NLW territory
£12.21/hr £23,810 £1,729 National Living Wage (21+)
£13.00/hr £25,350 £1,814 Above NLW and Real Living Wage
£15.00/hr £29,250 £2,122 Above London Living Wage

Each £1/hr increase at this level adds approximately £1,950 to your annual gross salary.


Sources

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