If you’re offered a job paying £12.50 an hour — or you’re checking your current rate — here’s exactly what that means for your annual salary and take-home pay in the 2026/27 tax year.
£12.50 an Hour: Annual Salary by Working Hours
The annual salary from £12.50 per hour depends on how many hours you work per week:
| Weekly hours | Annual gross salary | Monthly gross | Weekly gross |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35 hours | £22,750 | £1,896 | £437.50 |
| 37.5 hours | £24,375 | £2,031 | £468.75 |
| 40 hours | £26,000 | £2,167 | £500.00 |
| 45 hours | £29,250 | £2,438 | £562.50 |
Most common full-time schedule: 37.5 hours/week = £24,375 per year. This is used throughout this guide.
Take-Home Pay at £12.50 an Hour (2026/27)
Gross pay and take-home are not the same. Income tax and National Insurance reduce your salary before it lands in your bank account.
Annual Calculation: £24,375 Gross
| Element | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross annual salary | £24,375 |
| Personal Allowance (tax-free) | −£12,570 |
| Taxable income | £11,805 |
| Income tax (20%) | −£2,361 |
| National Insurance (8%) | −£946 |
| Net annual take-home | £21,068 |
NI calculation: 8% on (£24,375 − £12,570) = £11,805 × 8% = £945.60.
Monthly and Weekly Take-Home
| Period | Gross | Take-home (net) |
|---|---|---|
| Annual | £24,375 | £21,068 |
| Monthly | £2,031 | £1,756 |
| Weekly | £468.75 | £405 |
| Daily (5-day week) | £93.75 | £81 |
| Hourly | £12.50 | ~£10.80 |
At 40 Hours Per Week (£26,000/year)
If your contract is 40 hours per week, your gross is £26,000/year:
| Element | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross annual salary | £26,000 |
| Personal Allowance | −£12,570 |
| Taxable income | £13,430 |
| Income tax (20%) | −£2,686 |
| National Insurance (8%) | −£1,074 |
| Net annual | £22,240 |
| Monthly net | ~£1,853 |
How Does £12.50 an Hour Compare?
Putting your hourly rate in context:
| Benchmark | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| National Living Wage (21+) | £12.21/hr | Legal minimum from April 2026 |
| £12.50/hr (your rate) | £12.50/hr | 2.4% above NLW |
| UK median hourly pay (2025) | ~£16.80/hr | ONS ASHE data — £12.50 is below median |
| London Living Wage (2026) | £13.85/hr | Recommended London rate |
| Real Living Wage (outside London) | £12.60/hr | Voluntary employer rate |
Key point: £12.50/hr is above the legal minimum but below the median UK hourly rate. In London, it falls short of the recommended Living Wage.
Is £24,375 a Good Salary?
At 37.5 hours, this puts you at approximately the 35th–38th income percentile — meaning around 62–65% of UK earners earn more than this.
What this means practically:
- In most of the UK (outside London and the South East), £24,375 is enough for a basic lifestyle — renting a room, running a car, modest savings
- As a household income, it’s tight with dependants
- In London, £12.50/hr significantly restricts housing options (average rent £1,800+/month vs take-home of ~£1,756/month for a 37.5hr week)
For context: The ONS reports the median UK annual salary at approximately £35,000 (April 2025 data). At £24,375, you’re around £10,600 below the median.
Jobs That Pay Around £12.50 an Hour
£12.50/hr is common across service-sector and entry-level supervisory roles:
Healthcare & Social Care:
- Healthcare assistant — upper end of Band 2 (NHS)
- Care worker / domiciliary carer
- Support worker (learning disability, mental health)
Retail & Hospitality:
- Senior retail assistant / team leader
- Barista / coffee shop supervisor
- Restaurant supervisor
Administration & Office:
- Data entry administrator
- Receptionist (mid-level)
- Call centre agent
Logistics & Warehousing:
- Warehouse operative
- Delivery driver (non-specialist)
- Distribution centre picker
Public Sector:
- School support staff (mid-scale)
- Council administrative roles
Effect of Pension Contributions
If you’re auto-enrolled in a workplace pension and pay the minimum 5%:
| No pension | With 5% pension | |
|---|---|---|
| Annual pension contribution | £0 | £1,219 |
| Annual employer adds (3% min) | £0 | £731 |
| Net monthly take-home | £1,756 | ~£1,654 |
| Monthly pension pot grows by | £0 | ~£162 |
Auto-enrolment applies if you earn above £10,000/year and are aged 22–66. On £24,375 you will be auto-enrolled.
Don’t opt out — the employer’s 3% is free money. Opting out saves £102/month in take-home but costs the £731 employer contribution annually.
Hourly Rate Progression
How do common pay rises look from £12.50/hr?
| New hourly rate | Annual gross (37.5hr) | Monthly net increase | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| £13.00 | £25,350 | +~£67/month | +4% rise |
| £13.85 | £27,008 | +~£145/month | London Living Wage |
| £14.00 | £27,300 | +~£155/month | Common benchmark |
| £15.00 | £29,250 | +~£235/month | Notable step up |
| £16.00 | £31,200 | +~£318/month | Above median lower bound |
Key Tax Facts at £24,375
- Tax band: Basic rate only — no higher rate applies until earnings exceed £50,270
- Personal Allowance: Full £12,570 — no taper (the 60% marginal rate starts at £100,000)
- NI rate: 8% on earnings above £12,570 per year
- Student loans: If you have a Plan 2 loan (post-2012), repayments kick in at £27,295 — so no student loan deductions at £24,375
- Plan 1 loan threshold is £24,990 — if you have a Plan 1 loan, you would pay a small deduction (1% of earnings above £24,990 = £0 at £24,375… just below the threshold)