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What is Hourly to Salary Converter?

A Hourly to Salary Converter converts Hourly into Salary directly in your browser. It parses the source format, applies the standard mapping or formula, and outputs the target format ready to copy. It is commonly used by employees to compare job offers and to plan budgets.

Hourly to Salary Converter

$30/hr × 40 × 52 = $62,400 gross. After-tax 'salary' often makes more sense.

Inputs

$
hrs
weeks

Annual Salary

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Breakdown

Monthly
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Weekly
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Daily (8 hr)
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After-tax (~25%)
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About this tool

Hourly pay × hours = annual salary equivalent. Useful when comparing freelance/hourly offers to salaried roles. Don't forget benefits (employer pays ~30% on top of salary): health insurance, retirement match, PTO.

How it works

salary = hourly_rate × hours_per_week × weeks_per_year

Frequently asked questions

How much should I save from my salary?

Standard guidance: 50/30/20 - 50% needs, 30% wants, 20% savings. For aggressive wealth building or early retirement: 30-50% savings rate. The exact number depends on cost of living and goals.

Is contracting (1099) more profitable than W-2 employment?

Higher headline rate, but you pay both halves of FICA (15.3% vs 7.65%), no employer-paid health insurance, no 401(k) match, no PTO, no unemployment insurance. Rule of thumb: 1099 needs ~30-50% higher rate than W-2 to break even.

Why does my colleague earn the same but takes home more?

Most likely: more pre-tax retirement contributions, different state/province of residence, married vs single filing status, different health benefit elections, or different mix of pre-tax allowances (HRA, LTA in India).

How does a stock vesting cliff work?

Typical: 4-year vest with 1-year cliff. You vest 0% in months 1-12. At month 12, you vest 25% in one chunk. Then monthly for 36 more months. Leaving before month 12 forfeits the entire equity grant.

Should I take RSUs or salary?

If the company has been public 5+ years with consistent stock growth: RSUs are essentially deferred salary, often better. For startups or volatile stocks: take more salary. RSUs at vesting are taxed as ordinary income, so they're not magically tax-advantaged.

Is salary or hourly better?

Salary if your role has unpredictable hours and you want stable income. Hourly if you regularly work 50+ hours and your role qualifies for overtime (1.5x in US). Many salaried roles legally avoid overtime via FLSA exemptions - check your specific role.

How does a raise affect take-home?

Less than the raise amount. A $10,000 raise at the 32% federal bracket plus 7.65% FICA plus state tax means roughly $5,800-$6,500 net to your bank. Marginal rate matters, not the average.

Should I max my 401(k) / EPF / RRSP / super?

If your employer matches and you can afford the cash flow, always max the match - it's typically 100% return on the matched portion. Maxing beyond the match depends on your current vs expected retirement tax bracket.

How is a bonus taxed differently from regular salary?

It isn't - same brackets at year-end. But the WITHHOLDING is often higher (22% supplemental US, ~40% UK in the month). You reconcile at tax filing and usually get a refund.

What's the most tax-efficient salary structure?

Maximize pre-tax retirement first. Then health spending accounts. Then employer-sponsored insurance (often cheaper pre-tax). Then voluntary post-tax retirement (Roth) if your marginal rate is low. Optimize for total lifetime tax, not just current year.

How take-home pay is actually calculated

"Salary" can mean four very different numbers. Understanding which one you're seeing is the difference between confidence and confusion:

TermWhat it meansWhy it matters
CTC / Total cost to companyEverything the employer pays for you - gross + employer benefits + bonus pool + insuranceUsed in offer letters; never the number that hits your bank
Gross salaryCTC minus employer-side contributionsPre-tax base for income tax + employee deductions
Net / Take-homeGross minus income tax, social security/insurance, mandatory retirementWhat actually arrives in your account
In-handNet minus voluntary deductions (additional retirement, parking, gym, loans)What you can actually spend

The deduction stack (in order)

  1. Pre-tax retirement - 401(k) US, NPS/EPF India, pension UK, RRSP Canada, super AU. Reduces taxable income.
  2. Pre-tax health/insurance - HSA US, salary sacrifice UK pensions, group health India.
  3. Income tax - federal/national progressive brackets, applied to gross minus deductions above.
  4. State/provincial/local tax - varies hugely. 0% in TX/FL/UAE; 13%+ in CA, Quebec, Scotland.
  5. Social security / payroll tax - FICA 7.65% US, NI 8% UK, CPP+EI Canada, Medicare Levy 2% AU.
  6. Post-tax deductions - voluntary retirement (Roth), garnishments, parking, etc.

Why your paycheck is smaller than you expected

Two effects surprise most new earners:

  • Marginal vs effective rate: a "22% bracket" doesn't mean you pay 22% on everything. It's the rate on the LAST dollar. Your effective rate (total tax / total income) is always lower - usually 5-10 percentage points.
  • Withholding overshoots: employers withhold based on the assumption you earn that same paycheck every period. Bonuses get withheld at higher rates ("supplemental" 22% in US, ~40% by HMRC). You typically get this back at tax filing time.

Worked example: $100,000 gross in different countries

CountryFederal/national taxState/local taxSocial/insuranceApprox take-home
US (Texas)~$15,000$0$7,650 FICA~$77,350
US (California)~$15,000~$5,800$7,650 + $1,100 SDI~$70,450
UK (England)~£17,432n/a£3,743 NI~£62,825 of £84K equiv
Canada (Ontario)~CAD 20,150~CAD 7,000CAD 4,360 CPP + EI~CAD 68,490 of CAD 100K
Australia~AUD 24,667n/aAUD 2,000 Medicare~AUD 73,333 of AUD 100K
India (new regime)~Rs 8.34L~Rs 2,500 PTRs 21,600 EPF~Rs 73,000-75,000/month
UAE (Dubai)000 (expat)~AED 100,000 (all of it)
Germany~EUR 28,000n/aEUR 19,000 social~EUR 53,000 of EUR 100K

Same gross. Take-home ranges from ~53% (Germany) to 100% (UAE expat) for the same job offer.

Levers you control

  • Pre-tax retirement - every dollar into 401(k)/EPF/RRSP/super reduces taxable income by that amount. At 30% marginal rate, $10K contribution = $3K tax saved.
  • Health spending accounts (HSA US, salary sacrifice UK, group health India) - similar effect, plus medical spend stays untaxed.
  • Charitable giving - itemized deduction in most countries above a threshold.
  • Location - the biggest lever for high earners. State/country tax differences can be 10-15 percentage points.
  • Filing status - married vs single often shifts brackets favorably. UK marriage allowance, US MFJ, India HUF.

The formula explained

This calculator uses the following formula:

salary = hourly_rate × hours_per_week × weeks_per_year

The reason this formula works is rooted in the underlying physics, finance, or biology of the problem. Behind every calculator is a published, peer-reviewed equation or a widely accepted convention. We do not invent formulas; we apply standard ones from textbooks, government tables, professional bodies, and academic literature.

If you are curious about the math, the simplest way to verify is to plug in two known numbers and compare against a known result. The calculator should match published examples to within rounding precision.