40 Hours a Week at £15.00/hr After Tax 2025-26
Zero hours contract · Weekly gross: £600 · Annual gross: £31,200
Your earnings exceed the £12,570 Personal Allowance — Income Tax and NI apply on the excess.
20% Income Tax and 8% NI on earnings above £12,570/year.
Tax breakdown — 40 hrs/week at £15.00/hr 2025-26
| Item | Annual | Monthly | Weekly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross earnings | £31,200 | £2,600 | £600 |
| Personal Allowance (tax-free) | £12,570 | £1,048 | £242 |
| Income Tax | −£3,726 | −£311 | −£72 |
| National Insurance | −£1,490 | −£124 | −£29 |
| Net take-home | £25,984 | £2,165 | £500 |
How PAYE works on a zero hours contract
PAYE tax on zero hours contracts is calculated each pay period based on that period's earnings, annualised using your tax code. If you work irregular hours, your PAYE deductions may vary significantly week to week. The figures above assume a consistent 40 hours/week throughout the year. Weeks where you earn more than £242 will attract NI; weeks below will not.
Personalised insights — 40 hrs/week at £15.00/hr
Zero hours contracts swing with demand — a practical "what if" matters. If you work 20 hours/week instead of 40 at the same £15.00/hr, your annual gross would be £15,600 with a net monthly take-home of around £1,229 — that is £936/month less than your current figures. Over a year, the hours fluctuation therefore changes take-home by roughly £11,232.
At £15.00/hr you sit £5,803/year above the statutory National Living Wage of £12.21/hr (at the same 40 hours). The voluntary Real Living Wage of £12.60/hr would add £0/year at your current hours; the London Living Wage of £13.85/hr would add £0/year. Your annual gross of £31,200 is 95% above the commonly cited UK single-adult poverty benchmark of £16,000.
You keep 83% of every pound after Income Tax and NI, which equates to about £20 in combined deductions per working day (260-day year) and £100 of daily net reaching your bank account. A full-time 37.5-hour week at the same £15.00/hr would scale gross to £29,250 and net to £24,580/year (£2,048/month). At your current hours, saving 10% of net monthly (£217/month) into an ISA would take about 93 months to fill the full £20,000 allowance.
Further reading
Frequently asked questions
Do zero hours workers pay Income Tax?
Yes. At 40 hours/week at £15.00/hr, your annualised gross is £31,200, which exceeds the £12,570 Personal Allowance. Income Tax of £3,726/year is deducted through PAYE at 20% on earnings above £12,570.
Do zero hours workers pay National Insurance?
Yes. National Insurance applies on weekly earnings above £242 (£12,570/year). On £31,200/year, you pay £1,490 in NI at 8% on earnings above the threshold.
How much do I take home on a zero hours contract at £15.00/hr?
Working 40 hours/week at £15.00/hr gives a weekly gross of £600 and an annual gross of £31,200 (based on 52 weeks). After Income Tax of £3,726 and NI of £1,490, you take home £25,984/year — £2,165/month or £500/week. Effective tax rate: 16.72%.
Are zero hours workers taxed the same as regular employees?
Yes. Zero hours contract workers are treated as employees for tax purposes. Your employer deducts Income Tax and National Insurance through PAYE exactly as they would for a fixed-hours employee. The same Personal Allowance (£12,570) applies, and the same tax rates: 20% basic rate Income Tax and 8% employee NI on earnings above the thresholds.
What happens to my tax code on a zero hours contract?
On a zero hours contract, your employer uses your PAYE tax code (usually 1257L) to calculate deductions each pay period. Because zero hours earnings fluctuate, your employer annualises each pay period's earnings when calculating tax. This can mean over-deductions in busy weeks and under-deductions in quiet weeks. HMRC reconciles this via Self Assessment or a tax refund at year end. At 40 hours/week consistently, your annual gross is £31,200 and take-home is £25,984.
How does £15.00/hr on a zero hours contract compare to a salaried role?
At 40 hours/week, £15.00/hr gives a gross annual equivalent of £31,200 — the same as a salaried employee on that figure. Take-home is £25,984/year (£2,165/month). However, zero hours workers do not receive sick pay, holiday pay, or pension contributions from their employer by default, meaning the true value of a salaried role at £31,200 is typically higher than the equivalent zero hours gross.