UK Hourly Rate After Tax: Every Rate from £10 to £100 Per Hour

Browse our complete guide to hourly rate take-home pay in the UK. Each page below shows a detailed breakdown of the annual salary equivalent, income tax, National Insurance, net pay, Scotland comparisons, and practical tips for the 2026/27 tax year. Click any rate to see the full analysis.

£10 – £17 Per Hour

Near minimum to average wage

£18 – £30 Per Hour

Above average wage

£35 – £100 Per Hour

Senior and specialist roles

How These Figures Are Calculated

Every figure on these pages is calculated using official HMRC rates for the 2026/27 tax year (6 April 2026 to 5 April 2027). Annual salary equivalents assume a standard 37.5-hour working week (hourly rate × 37.5 hours × 52 weeks). We assume the standard tax code 1257L, no student loans, and no pension deductions. The calculations include both income tax and employee National Insurance contributions. Use our full salary calculator or hourly rate calculator to add student loans, pension contributions, Scottish tax rates, and other options.

Mottalib Radif, personal finance expert at Real Salary

Written by Mottalib Radif

MBA INSEAD · Finance Enthusiast

Updated for 2026/27 tax year