Estimates, single filer, no extras. Take-home uses headline tax and assumes no pension, student loan, benefits or credits. Rates are dated below and change — verify your own figures.
Finance · pay

Salary Converter

Hourly to annual, gross to take-home, and place to place.
gross & net · UK & US
$62,400 / yr

Your pay

US
$
Annual (gross)
$62,400
= $30.00 / hour · 40 hrs/wk · 52 wks/yr
After tax

Estimated take-home

gross minus tax

Where the money goes

Net take-home
Place to place

Take-home by location

same gross, different tax
Reality check

Versus the minimum wage

how your hourly rate compares
Field notes

Reading a pay figure

Using this tool

Gross, net, and where you live

Pay is quoted gross — before tax — but what lands in your account is net. The gap depends on income tax, national insurance or payroll taxes, and increasingly on where you live. Enter a rate, pick a location, and this tool converts the pay, estimates take-home, and lines up several places side by side so you can see the difference.

Worked example

A $100,000 salary is the same everywhere gross, but net it isn't: in Texas (no state income tax) you keep noticeably more than in California or New York, where state tax takes an extra slice on top of federal tax and FICA.

In the UK, a £50,270 salary crosses into the 40% higher-rate band — every extra pound above it is taxed much harder, which is why net pay flattens out as gross climbs.

How accurate is the take-home figure?

It's a solid estimate for a single person on standard allowances with no other income. It uses headline tax bands and ignores pensions, student loans, benefits, credits, and local quirks. Treat it as a ballpark, not a payslip.

What's included in the deductions?

UK: income tax (England/Wales/NI or Scotland) plus employee National Insurance. US: federal income tax, FICA (Social Security + Medicare), and state income tax for the chosen state. Employer-side taxes aren't shown — they don't come out of your pay.

Why does the same salary pay differently by location?

Because sub-national governments set their own income tax. Several US states levy none at all; others take up to double digits. Scotland runs different bands from the rest of the UK. Gross is identical; net isn't.

How current are the tax rates?

UK figures are the 2026/27 tax year; US figures are the 2026 federal schedule with representative state rates. Tax law changes and personal circumstances vary — always confirm with an official calculator or an accountant before relying on a number.