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Per Hour Wages ??

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andy15star | 22:17 Sun 17th Oct 2010 | Jobs
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Hi, just looking on the Direct.gov website and nearly every job they have on there say something like "£8.15 per Hour", but what i'd like to know is, is this BEFORE or AFTER tax ??.

So if it says "£8.15 per Hour" and it is a 37 hour a week job, then does this mean i will get £8.15 x 37 = £301.55 a week, or does tax have to come off this figure ?

Regards,
Andy
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This figure is before tax, how would they know how much tax you are liable to pay!
That's the gross hourly rate.
Question Author
Cheers for the answer, much appreciated... i'm probably thick, but i assumed tax was 20p in the £, so wasn't sure if they used 20% as a ballpark figure to give people a better idea of what the wage really meant to them.

Regards,
Andy
Some people have other income so already pay income tax - it may push them in to the higher rate.
Over 65s have a higher personal allowance too which affects the amount of tax they pay.
Question Author
So do you reckon for the average Joe that if it says £10 an hour, and it's for, say 40 hours a week, you'd get £8 (£10 - 20%) x 40 = £320 (ish) ?, Regards, Andy
All salries are quoted as gross- that is before tax.
There are lots of sites that will estimate net pay after deduction of tax and NI- just google NET PAY CALCULATOR
Question Author
Ah very good, hadn't realised there were Net Pay Calculators on-line, hadn't really thought about it to be honest!. Cheers!..... being made redundant this Friday so good to know i can work it out now!

All the best,
Andy
Or theres salary calculator but its possibly the same thing as net pay calculator
Don't forget that in addition to income tax there is also National Insurance to pay. As a useful rule of thumb, for a basic rate taxpayer, subtract a third from the figure to get the take-home pay.
Bloody 'ell, Mike. That's a bit excessive!
It makes no allowance for the amount which you can earn tax free (and NI free).

A better 'rule of thumb' guide is that you get to keep the first £125 of what you earn each week, with the government taking roughly a third of everything after that.

Chris
Agree, Chris. In my last job I had no tax allowance on my salary as it was swallowed up by my pension from a previous employment.

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