Income & Employment Guides UK — Maximise Your Earnings

£12.50 an Hour Is How Much a Year? UK Annual Salary (2026/27)

£12.50 per hour works out to £24,375 a year full-time. Here's the exact take-home pay after tax and National Insurance, monthly and weekly breakdowns, and what jobs pay £12.50 an hour in the UK.

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

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)

Sources

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