Real Living Wage — 20 hours per week After Tax 2025-26
Real Living Wage (UK (outside London)) · £12.60/hr · Gross: £13,104/year
Real Living Wage — 20 hours per week — full tax breakdown 2025-26
| Item | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|
| Gross pay | £13,104 | £1,092 |
| Personal Allowance (tax-free) | £12,570 | £1,048 |
| Income Tax | −£107 | −£9 |
| National Insurance (8%) | −£43 | −£4 |
| Net take-home | £12,954 | £1,080 |
Real Living Wage take-home pay — 20 hours a week
Working 20 hours/week at the Real Living Wage of £12.60/hr, your annual gross is £13,104 — 3% above the statutory National Living Wage equivalent of £12,698/year at the same hours. That voluntary premium is worth £406/year in extra gross pay. After Income Tax (£107) and National Insurance (£43), you take home £12,954/year (£1,080/month, £249/week, £50/day). For every £1 you earn, you keep approximately 98.86p.
Your part-time gross of £13,104 is 63% below the UK median salary of £35,000/year. Your earnings sit in the Basic Rate band — Income Tax applies at 20% on earnings above £12,570. The Real Living Wage is set annually by the Living Wage Foundation and applies in UK (outside London); the current rate of £12.60/hr has been in effect since November 2024. Employers voluntarily accredit and commit to paying this rate to all workers — including contractors and agency staff on long-term assignments.
These figures use the standard 1257L tax code with no pension contributions, student loan, or salary sacrifice deductions. Adding a pension contribution reduces your taxable pay — for example, a 5% pension on £13,104 reduces Income Tax by £5/year. If you are on an auto-enrolment pension (minimum 5% employee, 3% employer), your actual take-home will be lower than shown here.
Personalised insights — 20 hrs/week at £12.60/hr
If you were paid the statutory National Living Wage (£12.21/hr) at the same 20 hours per week instead of the Real Living Wage, you would earn £8 less per week, £34 less per month and £406 less per year gross. That is the real monetary value of your employer's Living Wage Foundation accreditation.
Switching location to the London Living Wage (£13.85/hr) at the same 20 hours would mean £1,300/year more in gross pay. Your annual gross of £13,104 sits 18% below the commonly cited UK single-adult poverty benchmark of £16,000. You keep 99% of every pound earned and pay roughly £1 in combined tax and NI per working day (260-day year).
Scaling up to a full-time 37.5-hour week at the same £12.60/hr would give an annual gross of £24,570 and a take-home of £21,210/year (£1,768/month). At your current 20 hours, saving 10% of your take-home (£108/month) into an ISA would take around 186 months to fill the full £20,000 annual allowance — a useful benchmark for retirement-adjacent saving even on low-wage pay.
Further reading
Frequently asked questions
How much do I take home on the Real Living Wage at 20 hours a week?
Working 20 hours/week at £12.60/hr (Real Living Wage), your annual gross is £13,104. After Income Tax (£107) and National Insurance (£43), you take home £12,954/year — £1,080/month or £249/week.
What is the Real Living Wage in 2025-26?
The Real Living Wage is £12.60/hr from November 2024, set by the Living Wage Foundation. It applies across the UK outside London. It is a voluntary rate — employers accredited by the Living Wage Foundation commit to paying it. It is higher than the statutory National Living Wage (£12.21/hr for age 21+).
Do I pay Income Tax on the Real Living Wage at 20 hours a week?
Yes. At 20 hours/week at £12.60/hr, your annual gross is £13,104, above the £12,570 Personal Allowance. Income Tax of £107/year is deducted at 20% on earnings above £12,570.
How much do I earn per week working 20 hours at £12.60?
Working 20 hours/week at £12.60/hr gives a weekly gross of £252 and an annual gross of £13,104 (52 weeks). Your weekly take-home after tax and NI is approximately £249.
What is the difference between the Living Wage and the National Living Wage?
The National Living Wage (NLW, £12.21/hr for age 21+) is a statutory minimum enforced by law — employers must pay it or face penalties. The Real Living Wage (£12.60/hr) and London Living Wage (£13.85/hr) are voluntary rates set by the Living Wage Foundation based on the actual cost of living. Employers choose to accredit themselves and commit to paying the higher voluntary rate.
Related calculators: