At £17 per hour you’ve crossed the UK median hourly pay. Here’s the complete breakdown of what £17/hr means for your pay packet in 2026/27.
£17 an Hour: Annual Salary
| Weekly hours | Annual gross | Monthly gross | Weekly gross |
|---|---|---|---|
| 35 hours | £30,940 | £2,578 | £595 |
| 37.5 hours | £33,150 | £2,763 | £637.50 |
| 40 hours | £35,360 | £2,947 | £680 |
Standard full-time at 37.5 hours/week = £33,150/year.
Take-Home Pay at £17/hr (2026/27)
37.5 Hours Per Week — £33,150 Gross
| Element | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross annual salary | £33,150 |
| Personal Allowance | −£12,570 |
| Taxable income | £20,580 |
| Income tax (20%) | −£4,116 |
| National Insurance (8%) | −£1,646 |
| Net annual | £27,388 |
| Monthly take-home | £2,282 |
| Weekly take-home | £527 |
40 Hours Per Week — £35,360 Gross
| Element | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross annual | £35,360 |
| Income tax (20%) | −£4,558 |
| National Insurance (8%) | −£1,823 |
| Net annual | £28,979 |
| Monthly net | ~£2,415 |
UK Earnings Context
| Benchmark | Rate | Annual (37.5hr) | Vs £17/hr |
|---|---|---|---|
| National Living Wage | £12.21 | £23,810 | £17/hr is 39% more |
| UK median hourly | ~£16.80 | ~£32,760 | £17/hr is just above |
| Your rate | £17.00 | £33,150 | |
| 60th percentile | ~£18.50 | ~£36,075 | |
| Higher rate tax starts | ~£25.78 | £50,270 | Well below higher rate |
Jobs Paying Around £17/hr
Healthcare (NHS):
- Band 5 (newly qualified RN, physiotherapists, radiographers, occupational therapists)
- Experienced dental nurses, pharmacy technicians (top of Band 4)
Trades:
- Qualified electrician (employed, no specialist premium)
- Gas Safe registered engineer (early-mid career)
- CNC machinist / skilled manufacturing
Technology:
- Junior software developer (first job post-bootcamp/degree)
- IT administrator, 2nd line support
Education:
- Teacher on the lower main pay scale (M1–M2)
- University academic hourly contracts
Finance and admin:
- Accounts assistant in larger organisations
- Experienced payroll clerk
Student Loan Deductions at £33,150
| Plan | Threshold | Annual deduction | Monthly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Plan 1 | £24,990 | £735 | £61.25 |
| Plan 2 | £27,295 | £527 | £43.92 |
| Plan 5 | £25,000 | £736 | £61.33 |
| Postgrad | £21,000 | £729 | £60.75 |
Plan 2 graduates (the most common recent group) will see approximately £44/month deducted.
Pension at £33,150
| Auto-enrol (5%+3%) | Higher contribution (8%+3%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Annual into pension | £2,625 + £995 = £3,620 | £5,040 + £995 = £6,035 |
| Net monthly cost to you | ~£137/month | ~£218/month |
| Monthly take-home after pension | ~£2,145 | ~£2,064 |
Tax Position at £33,150
You are comfortably in the basic rate band only. The higher rate of 40% does not apply until income exceeds £50,270. There is no personal allowance taper below £100,000.
Key thresholds comparison:
| Threshold | Amount | Your position |
|---|---|---|
| Personal Allowance | £12,570 | ✅ Full PA applies |
| Basic rate limit | £50,270 | ✅ Well below — 20% only |
| Higher rate starts | above £50,270 | ✅ Not applicable |
| Higher child benefit charge | £60,000 | ✅ Not applicable |