£10 Per Hour Is How Much a Year?

£10 an hour is £19,500 a year before tax (37.5 hrs/week). After tax you take home £1,463 a month.

£10/hour = Annual Salary
£19,500
gross per year (37.5 hours/week)
Take Home Yearly
£17,560
Take Home Monthly
£1,463
Take Home Weekly
£338
Take Home Daily
£68
Tax Breakdown
Gross salary (££10/hr × 37.5hrs × 52wks)£19,500
Income tax-£1,386
National Insurance-£554
Take home pay£17,560/yr (£1,463/mo)

£10 an Hour — Full Breakdown

If you earn £10 per hour and work a standard 37.5-hour week, your gross annual salary is £19,500. After income tax and National Insurance for 2025/26, your take home pay is £17,560 per year or £1,463 per month.

Is £10 Per Hour a Good Wage?

At £10 per hour, you are earning below the National Minimum Wage of £12.21 for workers aged 23 and over (2025/26). This rate is legal only for younger workers or apprentices. It also falls below the Real Living Wage of £12.60. On this wage, budgeting carefully is essential — and it is worth checking you are being paid correctly. If you are 23 or older, your employer is legally required to pay at least £12.21/hr. See our minimum wage calculator to check your entitlement.

What Does £10/Hour Get You?

On a 37.5-hour week, £10/hr gives you £1,463 per month after tax and National Insurance (or £338 per week). Here is what that looks like in practice:

With £1,463 per month after tax, budgeting is tight. Expect to allocate around £483 for rent (a room in a shared house outside London), £176 for household bills, and £219 for groceries. After transport costs of roughly £146, you would have about £439 left for savings, clothing, and everything else. Every pound counts at this level — meal planning, switching energy providers, and using cashback apps can genuinely help.

Who Earns Around £10 Per Hour?

Many workers across the UK earn around £10 per hour. These are typically entry-level or early-career positions:

Salaries vary by location, employer, and experience. Use our take-home pay calculator to see your exact figures.

Moving Up from £10/Hour

If you are earning £10 per hour, the most impactful step is to secure roles that pay at least the National Living Wage. Consider gaining a Level 2 or 3 qualification through a funded apprenticeship or college course. Sectors like care, warehousing, and retail offer clear progression — a team leader in retail can earn £13–15/hr. Look into forklift licences (around £300, quick ROI), CSCS cards for construction work, or SIA badges for security. Even small upskilling can push your rate above £14/hr within a year. Check what £15/hr would mean for your finances: £15/hr take-home pay.

Different hours or want to add student loans?

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Other Hourly Rates

See the full salary breakdown: £19,500 salary after tax