£20 an Hour Annual Salary — £39,000 Per Year
This page is pre-filled for £20 per hour in England, Wales and Northern Ireland and uses 37.5 hours per week and 52 weeks per year to convert to annual gross salary, then applies UK deductions for a quick take-home estimate.
Converted Salary
Annual Gross Salary
£39,000
Annual Net
£31,600
Monthly Net
£2,633
Weekly Net
£608
Daily Net
£122
Deduction Breakdown
Assumptions: 37.5 hours per week and 52 weeks per year, 2025/26 rates, England, Wales and Northern Ireland tax bands, and tax code 1257L.
How this conversion is calculated
To convert £20 per hour into salary, the page annualises your rate using a standard UK working pattern. That produces a gross annual figure of £39,000. Income Tax and National Insurance are then estimated using current bands and thresholds for 2025/26in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The output is useful for quick job-offer checks, contract-to-permanent comparisons, and budgeting before payroll starts. Because this page is pre-filled, you can confirm the baseline immediately and then move into the interactive calculator if your weekly hours, days, or tax setup differ from the default pattern.
Assumptions you should check
Real take-home pay can differ when overtime premiums, unpaid leave, variable shifts, pension deductions, or student loans apply. This page intentionally keeps assumptions simple so the result loads quickly and stays easy to compare across many rate points.
For final planning, open the main calculator and tailor inputs to your exact schedule. If you are paid under a different tax region, use the alternate region link in the section below.
Net pay per hour actually worked at £20/hour
Your gross rate is £20 per hour, but what you actually keep per hour of work is lower once tax and NI are deducted. Based on 37.5 hours per week and 52 weeks per year in England, Wales and Northern Ireland for 2025/26, the estimated net pay per hour worked is £16.20.
This effective net rate is useful when comparing offers or when bidding a contract — it shows what your time is actually worth after the government takes its share. For comparison, the gross-to-net efficiency at this rate is approximately 81%, meaning you retain 81p from every £1 of gross earnings.
How weekly hours affect your salary at £20/hour
The same hourly rate produces a meaningfully different annual salary depending on your contracted hours. The table below shows how £20/hour translates across common working week patterns in England, Wales and Northern Ireland for 2025/26.
| Hours per week | Annual gross | Annual net (est.) |
|---|---|---|
| 35h/week | £36,400 | £29,728 |
| 37.5h/week (this page) | £39,000 | £31,600 |
| 40h/week | £41,600 | £33,472 |
| 45h/week | £46,800 | £37,216 |
All figures use 2025/26 England, Wales and Northern Ireland rates with tax code 1257L. Net figures are estimates.
Permanent employment vs contracting at £20 per hour
The 37.5 hours per week and 52 weeks per year assumption used on this page treats the rate as if you work all 52 weeks. In practice, UK workers are entitled to at least 28 days (5.6 weeks) of paid statutory holiday per year. For a permanent employee, this holiday is paid — so the 52-week gross of £39,000 already accounts for it.
For contractors or freelancers, holiday is typically unpaid. Working only the effective 46.4 weeks (52 minus 5.6 holiday weeks) at £20 per hour gives a reduced annualised income of approximately £34,800 — around £4,200 less than the headline 52-week figure. Contractors should factor this into their rate when comparing against permanent offers, along with the absence of employer pension contributions, sick pay, and other employment benefits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Nearby rate conversion pages
Explore nearby hour rates to compare gross and net pay without re-entering values.
Related calculators and guides
- Hourly to Salary Calculator to adjust hours, days, or input mode.
- Take-Home Pay Calculator for Scotland support and tax code options.
- Net to Gross Calculator to reverse-plan a salary target.
- What is Take-Home Pay? and UK Income Tax Guide for context on deductions.