Compensation planning

Hourly to Salary Calculator

Quick answer: This hourly to salary calculator helps workers convert pay between hourly, weekly, monthly, and annual formats for easier comparisons.

Enter your details below and see your result instantly — no sign-up required.

Last updated: January 2025 · 3 min read

Convert any wage between hourly, weekly, monthly, and annual formats in one place. This is useful for job offers, freelance comparisons, budgeting, and understanding what a number really means across a full year.

Hourly to salary calculator converting wages into annual income
Productivity

Convert wages both ways

Start with any pay unit, then MultiCalcWise shows the hourly, weekly, monthly, and annual equivalent instantly.

Equivalent pay
Enter a pay amount to convert it
Hourly
Weekly
Monthly
Annual
Estimated after-tax annual

The after-tax estimate uses a flat 22% federal rate plus 7.65% FICA. It does not include state taxes, deductions, credits, or self-employment tax.

How the conversion works

The calculator first converts your starting number into an annual figure using hours per week and weeks per year. Once annual pay is known, it can be converted cleanly into weekly, monthly, and hourly equivalents.

Monthly pay here is based on annual pay divided by 12, which makes it useful for budgeting even if your real paycheck cadence is biweekly or semimonthly. Weekly pay is based on annual pay divided by weeks worked per year.

The after-tax estimate is intentionally simple. It is meant for rough comparisons, not tax filing, which is why the calculator uses a flat rate instead of progressive brackets.

Frequently Asked Questions

Multiply hourly pay by hours worked per week and then by weeks worked per year. The same logic can be reversed to convert annual pay back to hourly.

Not everyone works 52 paid weeks. Adjusting weeks per year makes the estimate more realistic for unpaid time off, seasonal work, or contract work.

No. It uses a flat 22 percent federal estimate plus 7.65 percent FICA for a simple planning number, not a full tax calculation.

Yes, for rough planning. Just remember freelance income often has different tax treatment and unpaid overhead that this simple converter does not include.