£17 Per Hour Is How Much a Year?

£17 an hour is £33,150 a year before tax (37.5 hrs/week). After tax you take home £2,282 a month.

£17/hour = Annual Salary
£33,150
gross per year (37.5 hours/week)
Take Home Yearly
£27,388
Take Home Monthly
£2,282
Take Home Weekly
£527
Take Home Daily
£105
Tax Breakdown
Gross salary (££17/hr × 37.5hrs × 52wks)£33,150
Income tax-£4,116
National Insurance-£1,646
Take home pay£27,388/yr (£2,282/mo)

£17 an Hour — Full Breakdown

If you earn £17 per hour and work a standard 37.5-hour week, your gross annual salary is £33,150. After income tax and National Insurance for 2025/26, your take home pay is £27,388 per year or £2,282 per month.

Is £17 Per Hour a Good Wage?

£17 per hour sits around or above the UK median hourly wage of £16.50 — meaning you are earning more than roughly half of all UK workers. This rate is 39% above the minimum wage. At this level you are comfortably above the Real Living Wage and should be able to cover rent, bills, and have some money left over in most UK cities. It is a typical rate for skilled workers, experienced administrators, and those with a few years in their field. To see how this compares to salaried roles, check the full £17/hr salary guide.

What Does £17/Hour Get You?

On a 37.5-hour week, £17/hr gives you £2,282 per month after tax and National Insurance (or £527 per week). Here is what that looks like in practice:

Taking home £2,282 per month provides a comfortable baseline. You could spend around £753 on rent (a one-bed flat in many UK cities), £274 on utilities and council tax, and £342 on groceries. With roughly £228 for commuting, you would have about £685 left each month for savings, social life, and personal spending. This is enough to start building an emergency fund and contributing to a pension beyond the minimum auto-enrolment.

Who Earns Around £17 Per Hour?

A wide range of skilled and semi-skilled roles pay around £17 per hour in the UK. Common positions include:

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

Moving Up from £17/Hour

From £17/hr, you are well-positioned to move into mid-level roles. Professional qualifications make the biggest difference at this stage: CIPD for HR, AAT/ACCA for accounting, PRINCE2 or Agile certifications for project management. In skilled trades, going self-employed or becoming a contractor can boost your effective rate by 30–50%. Management experience is also valuable — taking on team leader responsibilities, even informally, strengthens your CV for £22–28/hr roles. Healthcare workers should explore NHS band 6 positions, which typically pay £18–23/hr. See the jump to £25/hr: £25/hr salary breakdown.

Different hours or want to add student loans?

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Other Hourly Rates

See the full salary breakdown: £33,150 salary after tax