16 Hours a Week After Tax 2025-26
National Minimum Wage (£12.21/hr) · Gross: £10,159/year
You pay NO Income Tax — your earnings (£10,159/year) are below the £12,570 Personal Allowance.
National Insurance is also zero — both thresholds are £12,570 in 2025-26. Your take-home equals your gross.
Tax breakdown — 16 hours/week at NMW 2025-26
| Item | Annual | Monthly | Weekly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross earnings | £10,159 | £847 | £195 |
| Personal Allowance (tax-free) | £12,570 | £1,048 | £242 |
| Income Tax | −£0 | −£0 | −£0 |
| National Insurance | −£0 | −£0 | −£0 |
| Net take-home | £10,159 | £847 | £195 |
A note on National Insurance for students
NI kicks in above £12,570/year (£242/week) — students are subject to National Insurance on earnings above this threshold, exactly like any other worker. There is no NI exemption for students. The rate is 8% on earnings between £12,570 and £50,270. If you earn below £12,570/year, you pay zero NI.
Personalised insights — 16 hours/week at NLW
Working 16 hrs/week at the £12.21/hr National Living Wage, your £10,159 annual gross is 0.43× the full-time NLW benchmark (£23,810 at 37.5h/week). Your earnings sit inside your £12,570 Personal Allowance (81% used) — you keep 100p per £1 and have £2,411 of tax-free headroom left, roughly 197 additional NLW hours before the 20% Income Tax + 8% NI combo kicks in. On the same 16-hour schedule you would earn £8,320 on the under-21 rate (£10.00/hr) and only £6,282 on the apprentice rate (£7.55/hr) — being 21+ on the full NLW is 62% more than the apprentice rate (+£3,877/year) and +£1,839/year vs the under-21 rate. Term-time only (~30 weeks/year instead of 52) shifts your gross to £5,861 — take-home ~£5,861. Adding 1 hr/week year-round would add £635 to your annual net. If you can tuck away 20% of your monthly take-home (£169/month) into a Stocks & Shares ISA, the full £20,000 allowance fills in 119 months — compounding from age 18-22 is the single biggest head-start a student can give their future self.
Scotland comparison
Scotland uses different income tax bands (19% Starter rate, 20% Basic, 21% Intermediate). For lower earners below the Personal Allowance, both regions result in identical take-home pay.
Frequently asked questions
Do students pay income tax on 16 hours a week?
No. At 16 hours/week at NMW (£12.21/hr), your annual gross is £10,159, which is below the £12,570 Personal Allowance. You pay zero Income Tax.
Do students pay National Insurance working 16 hours a week?
No. Your annual earnings of £10,159 are below the NI Primary Threshold of £12,570 (£242/week). Students are subject to NI just like other workers, but only on earnings above the threshold.
Can I work 16 hours a week without paying tax?
Yes — at 16 hours/week at £12.21/hr, your annual gross (£10,159) is below the £12,570 Personal Allowance, so you pay no Income Tax and no National Insurance.
What is the student Personal Allowance?
There is no special student Personal Allowance — all UK residents get the same standard Personal Allowance of £12,570 for 2025-26. This is the amount you can earn before paying Income Tax. Students get exactly the same allowance as everyone else.
What is the annual equivalent salary for working 16 hours a week?
Working 16 hours/week at the National Minimum Wage (£12.21/hr) gives an annual gross of £10,159. Your annual take-home after tax is £10,159. This is based on 52 weeks per year — if you only work term-time (around 30 weeks), your actual gross would be approximately £5,861.
How does the NMW compare to the full National Living Wage for students working 16 hours a week?
The National Minimum Wage rate depends on your age. Workers aged 21+ earn the National Living Wage of £12.21/hr — giving £10,159/year at 16 hours/week. Workers aged 18-20 earn £10.00/hr — giving £8,320/year. Workers aged 16-17 and apprentices in year one earn £7.55/hr. Your net take-home of £10,159/year is based on the £12.21/hr NMW rate.