Enter your pay
Type your hourly pay. If you already know your yearly salary, switch the dropdown first.
Simple Pay Conversion
Convert hourly pay to yearly, monthly, and take-home income in seconds.
Start with your hourly pay. If your schedule is standard, leave the defaults alone.
Quick tutorial
If you are new here, follow these three steps. Most people finish in less than 10 seconds.
Type your hourly pay. If you already know your yearly salary, switch the dropdown first.
Standard full-time work is usually 40 hours per week and 52 weeks per year.
Start with yearly and monthly income. Open extra tools only if you want taxes, overtime, or target pay.
Start here
Most people only need hourly pay, hours per week, and weeks per year. The calculator updates instantly as you type.
Use hourly pay for most jobs. Only change the schedule fields if your work hours are different from a standard full-time job.
Tip: full-time is usually 40 hours a week and 52 weeks a year.
Quick breakdown
Once you know your main pay, this section helps answer the next two questions people usually have: what do I keep after taxes, and how much more does overtime add?
Estimated taxes: $0
Estimated net yearly: $0
Overtime yearly total: $0
Overtime uplift vs base: $0
Main tools
Use these if you need a little more detail after the main calculator.
Use overtime if you work extra hours. Use take-home pay if you want an estimate after taxes. Use “What do I need to earn?” if you are aiming for a specific yearly income.
Weekly total: $0
Yearly total: $0
Estimated taxes: $0
Estimated net yearly: $0
Estimated net monthly: $0
Required hourly rate: $0
Scenario hours/week: 40.0
New yearly income: $0
Difference vs current: $0
Combined yearly income: $0
Equivalent salary in new city: $0
Based on current yearly income and optional take-home estimate.
Shift weekly income: $0
Shift yearly income: $0
Understand your pay
Yearly pay is calculated as hourly rate x hours per week x weeks per year. Flexible schedules matter more than most calculators admit.
Gross pay is your headline number. Net pay is what you keep after federal, state, and payroll taxes plus deductions.
Income guides
Use these pages for quick answers, examples, and internal navigation to related salary levels.
FAQ
Multiply hourly rate by hours per week and weeks worked each year. This calculator does it instantly and supports custom schedules.
A good wage depends on location, cost of living, and taxes. Use the cost-of-living and take-home tools to compare true purchasing power.
Yes. Overtime can significantly increase annual earnings, especially with consistent extra hours and higher multipliers.
Use the schedule impact slider to instantly see how adding or removing hours changes annual income.