MakeMeMoney100 Hourly to Salary Calculator

Hourly to Salary Calculator

Enter any wage value and instantly see annual, monthly, biweekly, weekly, and daily equivalents.

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Enter a valid hourly rate (0–10,000)
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Enter a valid annual amount
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Default: 40 hrs
Hours beyond 40/wk at 1.5× rate
Quick presets — minimum wages

Your Pay Breakdown

Annual
Monthly
Biweekly
Weekly
Daily
Hourly

How the Conversion Works

The calculator uses three core parameters: your hourly rate, hours per week, and weeks per year. From those, every other figure is derived:

  • Total annual hours = hours/week × weeks/year − (holidays × hours/day)
  • Annual salary = hourly rate × total annual hours
  • Monthly = annual ÷ 12
  • Biweekly = annual ÷ 26
  • Weekly = hourly × hours/week
  • Daily = hourly × (hours/week ÷ 5)

When overtime is enabled, hours beyond 40/week earn 1.5× the base rate. The overtime premium is calculated as: overtime hours × (hourly × 0.5) × 52 and added to the base annual figure.

Worked Example — $25/hr

Assume $25/hr, 40 hrs/week, 52 weeks/year, 11 US federal holidays:

  • Working days/year: 260 − 11 = 249
  • Working hours/year: 249 × 8 = 1,992 hrs
  • Annual salary: $25 × 2,080 = $52,000 (standard 40×52), or $49,800 adjusted for holidays
  • Monthly: $52,000 ÷ 12 = $4,333.33
  • Biweekly: $52,000 ÷ 26 = $2,000

Quick Wage Reference Table

Standard 40 hrs/week, 52 weeks/year (2,080 hours):

Hourly Annual Monthly Biweekly Weekly

What Is a Good Hourly Wage in 2025?

Context matters, but here are widely-used benchmarks:

  • US Federal minimum: $7.25/hr ($15,080/yr) — well below a living wage in most cities.
  • Living wage (MIT estimate): $17–$25/hr for a single adult depending on city cost of living.
  • US median wage: Approximately $22–$25/hr (~$46,000–$52,000/yr) as of 2024 BLS data.
  • UK National Living Wage: £12.21/hr (2024) for workers 21+.
  • $30–50/hr is typically associated with skilled trades, tech, and professional roles.
  • $50+/hr places you in the top 25% of earners nationally in the US.

These figures are gross (before tax). After federal + state income taxes and FICA, take-home is typically 25–35% lower for middle-income earners.

How to Convert Salary to Hourly for Freelance Quoting

If you're transitioning from employment to freelancing, use this formula to avoid underpricing:

  1. Calculate your equivalent hourly: target annual ÷ 2,080
  2. Add 15.3% for self-employment tax (FICA employer + employee share)
  3. Add 20–30% for non-billable time, business expenses, and benefits gap
  4. Result: a freelance rate roughly 1.4–1.6× your employed equivalent hourly

Example: targeting $60,000/yr equivalent → $28.85/hr base → add SE tax and overhead → quote at least $40–46/hr.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • Multiply your hourly rate by the number of hours you work per week, then multiply by the number of weeks you work per year. For a standard 40-hour, 52-week year: hourly × 40 × 52 = annual salary. For $25/hr: $25 × 40 × 52 = $52,000/year.
  • A standard full-time schedule is 2,080 hours per year (40 hours/week × 52 weeks). If you subtract 11 US federal holidays (each 8 hours), that's 2,080 − 88 = 1,992 working hours. Use the "Paid Holidays" field above to adjust.
  • The US federal minimum is $7.25/hr. The MIT living wage for a single adult ranges from $17–$25/hr depending on location. The US median is around $22–$25/hr. A rate above $30/hr puts you comfortably above median in most US markets.
  • In the US, hours beyond 40/week are paid at 1.5× your regular rate. Example: $20/hr base, working 45 hrs/week → regular pay: 40 × $20 = $800; overtime: 5 × $30 = $150; total weekly pay: $950. Use the Overtime toggle above to include this in your calculation.
  • Enter your target annual salary in the "Annual Salary" field and the hourly equivalent will compute automatically. For freelancing, add 40–60% on top to cover self-employment taxes, non-billable time, and benefits. See the article above for a step-by-step formula.
  • No — the after-tax toggle only applies US federal income tax brackets for a single filer with standard deduction. It does not include state income taxes, FICA (Social Security/Medicare), 401(k) contributions, or other deductions. Use it as a rough ballpark, not a tax return.

Common wage lookups

Programmatic pages for each wage value are generated at deployment time.