£10 an Hour Is How Much a Year?

Based on a 37.5-hour week — with your take-home pay after tax (2025–26)

£10/hour equals
£19,500/year
before tax · £1,625/month · £375/week
Gross annual salary£19,500
Income tax−£1,386
National Insurance−£554
Take-home pay£17,560/year

After tax that's about £9/hour effective. Standard tax code, no pension or student loan. You keep 90% of your gross.

£10 an hour at a glance
PeriodBefore taxAfter tax
Yearly£19,500£17,560
Monthly£1,625£1,463
Weekly£375£338
Daily (5-day week)£75£68
Hourly£10£9

£10 an hour is how much a year?

£10 an hour is £19,500 a year before tax, assuming you work 37.5 hours a week across all 52 weeks of the year (£10 × 37.5 × 52). That's £1,625 a month or £375 a week before any deductions.

After income tax and National Insurance, your take-home pay is about £17,560 a year — roughly £1,463 a month, or an effective £9 an hour. This assumes the standard 1257L tax code with no pension contributions or student loan repayments.

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Nearby hourly rates

£11/hour → All salaries →

Frequently asked questions

£10 an hour is £19,500 a year (37.5h/week × 52 weeks). After tax and NI you take home about £17,560 a year.
£1,625 a month before tax, or about £1,463 a month after tax and National Insurance.