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Hourly to Salary Calculator

Turn an hourly wage into annual, monthly, biweekly, weekly, and daily pay, updated as you type.

Your hourly pay

Everything is calculated in your browser. Nothing is uploaded.

Annual salary
52,000
gross pay per year
4,333.33
Monthly
2,000
Biweekly
1,000
Weekly
200
Daily

Weekly and biweekly figures are gross pay for a week you actually work. Monthly spreads the yearly total across twelve months, and the daily figure assumes a five-day week. All amounts are before tax.

How to convert hourly pay to a salary

  1. Enter your hourly rate

    Type the amount you earn per hour into the first field.

  2. Set your hours and weeks

    Enter how many hours you work each week and how many weeks a year you work, which defaults to 52.

  3. Read the salary figures

    The annual, monthly, biweekly, weekly, and daily amounts appear instantly and update whenever you change an input.

Why use this tool

Five pay periods at once

Annual, monthly, biweekly, weekly, and daily gross pay from one hourly rate, all on screen together.

Adjustable working year

Weeks per year defaults to 52 but drops to match unpaid vacation, so the annual figure reflects the weeks you are actually paid for.

Updates as you type

Every figure recalculates the moment you change the rate, the hours, or the weeks. There is no calculate button.

Currency-agnostic

Results are plain numbers without a symbol, so the same conversion works for dollars, euros, pounds, or anything else.

Copy a full breakdown

One button copies every figure with its label as plain text, ready to paste into an email or a spreadsheet.

Runs entirely in your browser

Everything happens on your device; nothing is uploaded.

About this tool

This calculator turns an hourly wage into the salary figures people actually compare: yearly, monthly, biweekly, weekly, and daily pay. It multiplies your hourly rate by the hours you work each week and the weeks you work each year to get an annual total, then breaks that total down into every common pay period. Change any of the three inputs and all five figures update as you type, so you can see straight away what a raise, a shorter week, or a few weeks of unpaid leave does to your pay over a year.

Use it to compare a contract quoted by the hour against a salaried role, to sanity-check a job offer, or to work out what your time is worth per week and per day. The weeks-per-year field defaults to 52 but you can lower it to account for unpaid vacation. Weekly and biweekly amounts are gross pay for a week you actually work, monthly spreads the annual total evenly across twelve months, and the daily figure assumes a five-day working week. For quick raise and tax sums the percentage calculator helps, and the business days calculator counts exactly how many working days a year holds.

Every figure is gross pay before income tax, payroll deductions, and benefits, so treat the results as a before-tax estimate rather than a paycheck. Numbers are shown without a currency symbol, which means the same math works whatever you are paid in. Nothing you type is uploaded: every calculation runs on your device.

Frequently asked questions

How is the annual salary calculated?
The tool multiplies your hourly rate by the hours you work each week and by the weeks you work each year. That yearly total is then divided into monthly, biweekly, weekly, and daily figures.
Are the results before or after tax?
Before tax. Every amount is gross pay and does not deduct income tax, payroll contributions, benefits, or other withholdings, so your actual take-home pay will be lower.
What does the weeks-per-year field do?
It sets how many weeks a year you are paid for. It defaults to 52 for a full year. If you take unpaid time off, lower it, for example to 50 for two unpaid weeks, and the annual total drops to match.
How are the weekly, biweekly, and daily figures worked out?
Weekly pay is your hourly rate times the hours you work in a week, and biweekly pay is two of those weeks. Monthly pay spreads the annual total evenly across twelve months, and the daily figure divides a working week into five days.
Which currency does it use?
None in particular. Figures are shown as plain numbers without a currency symbol, so the same conversion works for any currency as long as you enter the rate in that currency.
Is my data uploaded anywhere?
No. Everything runs in your browser; nothing is sent to a server.

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