Hourly Wage to Yearly Salary Calculator
Convert any hourly rate to annual, monthly, and weekly pay. Works for any wage, schedule, and tax rate.
Wondering what your hourly rate actually adds up to over a full year? At $30 an hour working a standard 40-hour week for 52 weeks, your gross annual pay is $62,400, which works out to roughly $5,200 a month or $1,200 a week before taxes. After a typical 22% effective tax rate, take-home drops to about $48,672 a year. This calculator handles any hourly wage, not just $30, so you can model raises, part-time schedules, overtime-free contracts, or side gigs and instantly see how each variable shifts your yearly earnings.
The math looks simple, but real schedules complicate it. A 37.5-hour workweek at $30 brings gross pay to $58,500, while two weeks of unpaid leave reduces a 40-hour year to $60,000. Self-employed contractors often use 48 working weeks to account for holidays and slow periods. Tax rate also matters: a single filer in a no-income-tax state may keep 78% of gross, while a high earner in California could net closer to 68%. Enter your own numbers below to see exactly how hours, weeks, and taxes shape your annual paycheck in 2026.
How it works: Enter your hourly rate, weekly hours, working weeks per year, and estimated tax rate. The calculator multiplies them to find gross annual income, applies your tax rate to estimate net pay, and breaks the result down by month and week.
This tool provides estimates only. Actual take-home pay depends on filing status, deductions, state of residence, and pre-tax benefits. Consult a tax professional for precise planning.
Hourly to Yearly Salary: The Complete 2026 Guide
Converting an hourly wage into a yearly salary helps with budgeting, job offers, loan applications, and side-by-side comparisons. The numbers shift based on hours worked, weeks paid, and your tax situation — here's how to think about each piece.
Common Hourly Rates Converted to Annual Salary (40 hrs/week, 52 weeks)
| Hourly Rate | Weekly Gross | Monthly Gross | Annual Gross | Annual Net (22% tax) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $15/hr | $600 | $2,600 | $31,200 | $24,336 |
| $20/hr | $800 | $3,467 | $41,600 | $32,448 |
| $25/hr | $1,000 | $4,333 | $52,000 | $40,560 |
| $30/hr | $1,200 | $5,200 | $62,400 | $48,672 |
| $40/hr | $1,600 | $6,933 | $83,200 | $64,896 |
| $50/hr | $2,000 | $8,667 | $104,000 | $81,120 |
| $75/hr | $3,000 | $13,000 | $156,000 | $121,680 |
$30/hr Annual Pay by Schedule
| Hours/Week | Weeks/Year | Annual Gross | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 | 52 | $62,400 | Standard full-time with paid PTO |
| 40 | 50 | $60,000 | Two weeks unpaid leave |
| 37.5 | 52 | $58,500 | Common in healthcare/admin roles |
| 35 | 52 | $54,600 | UK-style full-time week |
| 30 | 52 | $46,800 | Part-time / reduced schedule |
| 40 | 48 | $57,600 | Contractor with 4 weeks off |
| 20 | 52 | $31,200 | Half-time / second job |
The Basic Formula
The core conversion is straightforward: hourly rate × hours per week × weeks per year = annual gross income. At $30 an hour, 40 hours, and 52 weeks, that's $62,400. The rule of thumb many people use is 'double your hourly rate and add three zeros' — so $30/hr becomes roughly $60,000/yr. This shortcut assumes a 40-hour week and 50 weeks of work, and it's accurate to within 4% for most full-time schedules. Use it for ballpark comparisons, but rely on the actual formula when negotiating salary or filling out a mortgage application.
Gross vs. Net: What You Actually Keep
Gross income is the headline number; net income is what hits your bank account. For a $62,400 gross salary, expect FICA (7.65%), federal income tax (about 10–12% effective for this bracket), and state tax (0–9%) to combine to roughly 18–28%. A common estimate is a 22% effective rate, leaving about $48,672 net annually or $4,056 per month. Workers in Texas, Florida, or Washington keep more because there's no state income tax, while Californians and New Yorkers may lose an extra $2,000–$4,000 to state withholding. Always model your specific situation rather than assuming a flat rate.
Why Weeks Per Year Matters
Most salary calculators assume 52 paid weeks, but reality varies. Salaried W-2 employees with paid time off effectively work 52 weeks. Hourly workers without PTO who take two weeks off earn only 50 weeks of pay — a $2,400 difference at $30/hr. Independent contractors typically plan for 48 working weeks to account for holidays, sick days, and gaps between clients, dropping a $30/hr equivalent to $57,600. A good rule of thumb: subtract one week of pay for every two weeks of unpaid time off you expect to take during the year.
Part-Time and Variable Schedules
Not everyone works 40 hours. A 30-hour part-time schedule at $30/hr earns $46,800 per year — still solid, but 25% less than full-time. Hospitality, retail, and gig workers often see swings between 20 and 50 hours per week, making annual estimates trickier. The best approach is to track actual hours for 4–6 weeks, find the average, and multiply. If you average 28 hours weekly at $30/hr, you'll earn around $43,680 annually. Build a 10% buffer below your estimate for slow seasons, especially in seasonal industries like landscaping or tourism.
Overtime and Bonus Pay
U.S. non-exempt workers earn 1.5× their hourly rate beyond 40 hours per week. At $30/hr, overtime pays $45/hr. Just 5 hours of weekly overtime adds $11,700 to annual income (5 × $45 × 52), pushing a $62,400 base to $74,100. Some industries (nursing, manufacturing, IT support) routinely offer 10–20% of base pay in shift differentials or on-call stipends. Salaried 'exempt' employees usually don't get overtime, so a $62,400 salary at 50 hours/week effectively pays $24/hr. Always calculate your true hourly rate based on hours actually worked, not your contract.
Comparing Job Offers Fairly
When comparing a $30/hr contract role to a $58,000 salary, factor in benefits. Employer-paid health insurance is worth $6,000–$15,000 per year; a 401(k) match adds 3–6% of salary; paid time off equals about $2,400 per two weeks at $30/hr. A common guideline: add 25–30% to a W-2 base salary to estimate total compensation, or subtract that same percentage from a 1099 contract rate to compare apples-to-apples. A $30/hr 1099 contract is roughly equivalent to a $23/hr W-2 job once benefits and self-employment tax are factored in.
Budgeting From Your Hourly Wage
Once you know your net monthly pay, use the 50/30/20 rule as a starting point: 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings. At $30/hr full-time with 22% taxes, that's about $4,056 monthly take-home — meaning roughly $2,028 for rent/utilities/groceries, $1,217 for discretionary spending, and $811 toward savings or debt. Most lenders cap housing costs at 28–30% of gross monthly income, which at $5,200 gross means a maximum of $1,560 for rent or mortgage. Build a one-month emergency fund first (about $4,000), then push toward three to six months.
Raises, Inflation, and Real Wages
A $30/hr wage in 2026 buys less than it did a few years ago. Cost-of-living adjustments typically run 2–4% annually; if your raise is below inflation, your real income has dropped. A useful rule: ask for a raise that beats the trailing 12-month CPI by at least 1 percentage point. Going from $30 to $31.50/hr (a 5% bump) adds $3,120 in annual gross pay — meaningful, but barely offsetting 3% inflation. Track your hourly rate in 'real' terms by comparing it to the same job posting from two years ago, not just last year's paycheck.
How This Calculator Works
Core formula: Annual Gross = Hourly Rate × Hours/Week × Weeks/Year; Annual Net = Annual Gross × (1 − Tax Rate%)
Assumptions
All hours are paid at the same rate (no overtime premium applied automatically).
Tax rate entered is your combined effective rate (federal + state + FICA), not your marginal bracket.
Months are treated as equal twelfths of the year for budgeting purposes.
Weeks-per-year represents paid working weeks, not calendar weeks.
No employer benefits, 401(k) contributions, or pre-tax deductions are modeled separately.
Parameter meanings
| Input | What it means | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Hourly rate | Your gross pay per hour before any deductions | Linear: doubling rate doubles annual income |
| Hours per week | Average paid hours each week | Each extra hour adds (rate × weeks) per year |
| Weeks per year | Number of paid working weeks | Each week dropped reduces annual pay by (rate × hours) |
| Tax rate | Combined effective tax percentage | A 5-point increase reduces net pay by 5% of gross |