£19 an Hour — Full Breakdown
If you earn £19 per hour and work a standard 37.5-hour week, your gross annual salary is £37,050. After income tax and National Insurance for 2026/27, your take home pay is £30,196 per year or £2,516 per month.
Is £19 Per Hour a Good Wage?
£19 per hour is 15% above the UK median hourly rate and 56% above minimum wage. This is a good wage by any measure — you are in the upper half of UK earners. At this level, full-time work gives you a gross salary equivalent in the £37,050 range, which places you comfortably in the basic rate tax band. You should be able to save, cover housing costs in most areas, and enjoy a reasonable standard of living. This rate is common for experienced professionals, team leaders, and skilled tradespeople.
What Does £19/Hour Get You?
On a 37.5-hour week, £19/hr gives you £2,516 per month after tax and National Insurance (or £581 per week). Here is what that looks like in practice:
Taking home £2,516 per month provides a comfortable baseline. You could spend around £755 on rent (a one-bed flat in many UK cities), £302 on utilities and council tax, and £302 on groceries. With roughly £252 for commuting, you would have about £905 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 £19 Per Hour?
A wide range of skilled and semi-skilled roles pay around £19 per hour in the UK. Common positions include:
- Carpenter or joiner (experienced)
- Senior teaching assistant or HLTA
- Marketing coordinator
- Medical laboratory assistant
- Recruitment consultant (early career)
Salaries vary by location, employer, and experience. Use our take-home pay calculator to see your exact figures.
Moving Up from £19/Hour
From £19/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.
How This Compares
The UK median hourly wage is around £16.50. At £19 per hour, you are earning about 15% more than the typical UK worker. This is a solid above-average rate that places you in the upper half of earners. Your gross annual equivalent of £37,050 keeps you within the basic-rate tax band, meaning all your taxable income is taxed at 20%. Compared to the national average, £19/hr provides a comfortable standard of living in most UK regions.
Is £19 an Hour Good UK?
Yes, £19 an hour is a good wage in the UK. It is about 15% above the median hourly rate of £16.50 and well above the National Minimum Wage. Working full-time at this rate gives you a gross salary of £37,050, placing you comfortably in the upper half of UK earners.
What Salary Is £19 an Hour?
£19 an hour working a standard 37.5-hour week equals £37,050 per year before tax. After income tax and National Insurance for 2026/27, your take-home pay is £30,196 per year or £2,516 per month.
How Much Is £19 an Hour After Tax UK?
At £19 per hour on a 37.5-hour week, your gross annual salary is £37,050. After income tax of £4,896 and National Insurance of £1,958 for 2026/27, you take home £30,196 per year — that is £2,516 per month or £581 per week.
How Does £19 an Hour Compare to UK Average?
The UK median hourly wage is around £13.37. At £19 per hour, you earn about 42% more than the typical UK worker. Your gross annual equivalent of £37,050 keeps you within the basic-rate tax band, so all your taxable income is taxed at just 20%. Compare nearby rates: £17/hr | £20/hr | £25/hr.
Related Hourly Rates
See also: £37,050 salary after tax · £2,516/month take home · UK professions & salaries
£19 an Hour at Different Weekly Hours
Not everyone works a 37.5-hour week. Here is what £19 an hour comes to as an annual salary — and take-home pay after tax and National Insurance for 2026/27 — at the most common full-time and part-time schedules. A 40-hour week at £19/hr is £39,520 a year (take home £2,664/month), while a 30-hour week is £29,640 a year (take home £2,072/month).
| Weekly hours | Gross / year | Take home / year | Take home / month |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 hrs/wk | £39,520 | £31,974 | £2,664 |
| 37.5 hrs/wk (standard) | £37,050 | £30,196 | £2,516 |
| 35 hrs/wk | £34,580 | £28,417 | £2,368 |
| 30 hrs/wk | £29,640 | £24,860 | £2,072 |
| 20 hrs/wk | £19,760 | £17,747 | £1,479 |
Gross = £19/hr × weekly hours × 52 weeks. Take-home figures apply the 2026/27 England income-tax bands (20/40/45%) and Class 1 National Insurance (8% / 2%), standard tax code, no student loan or pension. Change any assumption in the full calculator.
Different hours or want to add student loans?
Use our full calculator →Other Hourly Rates
See the full salary breakdown: £37,050 salary after tax