Answers · UK 2025/26
What is £80 an hour as an annual salary and take-home pay in the UK?
On a standard 37.5-hour week, £80 an hour works out to a £156,000 annual salary. For 2026/27, that gives take-home pay of £94,466.40 a year after £56,403.00 Income Tax and £5,130.60 National Insurance -- about £7,872.20 a month.
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Using a standard full-time working week of 37.5 hours, £80 an hour converts to an annual salary of £80 x 37.5 x 52 = £156,000. On this salary for 2026/27: taxable income after the £12,570 Personal Allowance is £143,430, split between the 20% basic rate band and the 40% higher rate band above £50,270, giving £56,403.00 Income Tax. National Insurance is 8% of £37,700 plus 2% above the Upper Earnings Limit, coming to £5,130.60. Combined deductions of £61,533.60 leave £94,466.40 take-home a year, around £7,872.20 a month or £1,816.66 a week. At this level of pay, remember that income above £100,000 starts to taper away the Personal Allowance, creating an effective marginal rate of 60% on the slice between £100,000 and £125,140. Contractors and freelancers quoting a day rate can use a similar conversion: a day rate roughly equivalent to this hourly rate (around £600 to £630 a day for a 7.5-hour day) would produce a comparable annual figure before accounting for the different tax treatment that applies to self-employed or umbrella company workers.
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This answer is informational only and does not constitute financial, tax or legal advice. Figures are for the 2025/26 UK tax year. See our methodology and sources.