£35 an Hour, 10 Hours a Week After Tax

England · £18,200/year gross · 2025-26

Monthly take-home
£1,385
Weekly take-home
£320
Annual take-home
£16,624
Gross annual
£18,200

Pay breakdown — £35/hr, 10h/week

Annual Monthly Weekly
Gross pay £18,200 £1,517 £350
Income Tax −£1,126 −£94 −£22
National Insurance −£450 −£38 −£9
Net take-home £16,624 £1,385 £320
Effective tax rate 8.7%

Frequently asked questions

How much do I take home working 10 hours a week at £35 per hour?

Working 10 hours per week at £35/hour, your gross annual salary is £18,200. After Income Tax (£1,126) and National Insurance (£450), your take-home pay is £16,624/year — £1,385/month or £320/week.

What is £35 an hour 10 hours a week as an annual salary?

£35 per hour × 10 hours per week × 52 weeks = £18,200 gross annual salary. Working full-time (37.5h/week), the same rate would give £68,250/year. Part-time earnings may reduce your Income Tax and National Insurance proportionally.

How much tax do I pay working 10 hours a week?

On £18,200/year (10h/week at £35/hr), Income Tax is £1,126 and National Insurance is £450 — a combined effective tax rate of 8.7%. The personal allowance of £12,570 means earnings below this threshold are tax-free.

Can I work 10 hours per week and claim benefits?

Benefits eligibility depends on many factors including your household income, savings, and the specific benefit. At £18,200/year (£1,385/month net), you may be entitled to Universal Credit if household income and savings are below thresholds. Universal Credit tapers at 55p per £1 of net earnings above the standard allowance. Use our Universal Credit calculator for a personalised estimate.

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Related:

All part-time hours £35/hr full-time Universal Credit calculator Minimum wage calculator