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NMW (Age 21+) — 48 hours per week After Tax 2025-26

Age 21+ (National Living Wage) · £12.21/hr · Gross: £30,476/year

Annual take-home
£25,463
Monthly
£2,122
Weekly
£490
Effective rate
16.45%
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What do you earn?
Annual gross salary, before any deductions.
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NMW (Age 21+) — 48 hours per week — full tax breakdown 2025-26

Item Annual Monthly
Gross pay £30,476 £2,540
Personal Allowance (tax-free) £12,570 £1,048
Income Tax −£3,581 −£298
National Insurance (8%) −£1,432 −£119
Net take-home £25,463 £2,122
Total deductions: £5,013 · Effective rate: 16.45%

Minimum wage take-home pay — 48 hours a week

Working 48 hours per week at the Age 21+ (National Living Wage) of £12.21/hr, your weekly gross is £586 and your annual gross is £30,476 (based on 52 weeks). After Income Tax of £3,581 and National Insurance of £1,432, your take-home pay is £25,463/year, which is £2,122/month or £490/week net.

These figures use the standard tax code 1257L, no pension contributions, and no student loan deductions. Use the calculator above to adjust for your specific circumstances — including pension contributions that reduce your taxable income and National Insurance liability.

Personalised insights — 48 hrs/week at £12.21/hr

NLW → Real Living Wage
+£973/yr
voluntary £12.60/hr premium
Keep per £1
84%
after Income Tax + NI
Tax per working day
£19
260-day year
vs £16k poverty line
90% above
UK single adult benchmark
Full-time (37.5h) net
£20,663/yr
£1,722/month
Fill £20k ISA @ 10% savings
95 months
£212/month from net

At £12.21/hr (statutory NLW) at 48 hours/week your annual gross is £30,476. Stepping up to the voluntary Real Living Wage of £12.60/hr would add £973/year gross; the London Living Wage of £13.85/hr would add £4,093/year gross at the same hours — worth checking your employer's Living Wage Foundation accreditation status.

Your annual gross of £30,476 sits 90% above the commonly cited UK single-adult poverty benchmark of £16,000. You keep 84% of each pound earned after Income Tax and NI, and around £19 leaves your paycheck in combined tax/NI per working day (260-day year). Daily net reaching your bank account: roughly £98.

Scaling up to a full-time 37.5-hour week at the same £12.21/hr would give an annual gross of £23,810 and a take-home of £20,663/year (£1,722/month). On your current 48 hours, saving 10% of your take-home (£212/month) into an ISA would take about 95 months to reach the £20,000 annual allowance.

Further reading

Frequently asked questions

How much do I take home on minimum wage working 48 hours a week?

Working 48 hours/week at £12.21/hr (NMW (Age 21+) — 48 hours per week), your annual gross is £30,476. After Income Tax (£3,581) and National Insurance (£1,432), you take home £25,463/year — £2,122/month or £490/week.

Do I pay Income Tax on minimum wage at 48 hours a week?

Yes. At 48 hours/week, your annual gross is £30,476, above the £12,570 Personal Allowance. Income Tax of £3,581/year is deducted at 20% on earnings above £12,570.

How much do I earn per week working 48 hours at the minimum wage?

Working 48 hours/week at £12.21/hr gives a weekly gross of £586 and an annual gross of £30,476 (52 weeks). Your weekly take-home after tax is approximately £490.

What is the NMW / NLW rate for Age 21+ (National Living Wage) in 2025-26?

The National Living Wage for workers aged 21 and over is £12.21/hr from April 2025. This is the statutory minimum — employers must pay at least this rate or face HMRC enforcement and financial penalties.

How much tax do I actually pay on minimum wage working 48 hours a week?

The effective tax rate (Income Tax + NI as % of gross) on £30,476 annual gross is 16.45%. Income Tax is £3,581 and National Insurance is £1,432. Total deductions: £5,013/year.

What is the difference between the National Minimum Wage and the National Living Wage for this age group?

The National Living Wage (NLW) of £12.21/hr applies to workers aged 21 and over. This is technically a higher tier of the National Minimum Wage — not a separate legal concept. At 48 hours/week, that gives a gross of £30,476/year (£586/week). Workers under 21 are entitled to lower NMW rates: £10.00/hr for ages 18-20 and £7.55/hr for ages 16-17.

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