⏰ Hourly to Annual Salary Calculator for £15/hr at 20 Hours/Week

Convert your hourly rate to an annual salary.

Quick answer

£15.00/hr at 20 hours a week works out to £15,600 a year gross.

  • Weekly: £300
  • Monthly: £1,300
  • Annual: £15,600
  • At 40h/week: £31,200/year

In detail: Hourly to Annual Salary Calculator for £15/hr at 20 Hours/Week

£15.00/hour at 20 hours a week translates to a headline £15,600 annual gross — a figure that sits in the basic-rate band, close to minimum wage territory. Remember this assumes you're paid every week of the year, including holidays. If the role is hourly-paid with unpaid leave, subtract roughly 4 weeks to get a more realistic £14,400.

For comparison with salaried roles, the conventional UK full-time week is 37.5 or 40 hours. At 20h/week this is part-time, which affects how employers benchmark the role and whether you'll qualify for full benefits like private medical, bonus eligibility, or employer pension matching.

Effective take-home on £15,600 is roughly £12,168 after income tax, NI and a standard 5% pension contribution. Divided by 52 weeks × 20 hours, that's an effective net hourly of £11.70 — often more useful when comparing offers than the headline gross rate.

What this tool helps with

Annual salary equivalent

What you can enter

  • Hourly rate (£): 15
  • Hours per week: 20

Why this page is useful

Convert your hourly rate to an annual salary. This page loads fast, gives a direct answer, and then expands with useful context instead of burying the result under filler.

Frequently Asked Questions

£15.00/hr at 20 hours a week works out to £15,600 a year gross.
Weekly: £300 • Monthly: £1,300 • Annual: £15,600 • At 40h/week: £31,200/year
£15.00/hour at 20 hours a week translates to a headline £15,600 annual gross — a figure that sits in the basic-rate band, close to minimum wage territory. Remember this assumes you're paid every week of the year, including holidays. If the role is hourly-paid with unpaid leave, subtract roughly 4 weeks to get a more realistic £14,400.
For comparison with salaried roles, the conventional UK full-time week is 37.5 or 40 hours. At 20h/week this is part-time, which affects how employers benchmark the role and whether you'll qualify for full benefits like private medical, bonus eligibility, or employer pension matching.
Hourly rate × hours per week × 52 weeks.
This assumes 52 paid weeks. Adjust if your hours or pay vary.