
Macho Duck
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Take the amount per hour and multiply that by the number of hours per week. Then multiply that number by 52 (the number of weeks in a year). That will give you the answer you are looking for. |
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Bio-Hazard
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£19,500.00 |
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willygromit
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£19,500 before tax and n.i.
probably looking at around 16K clear around 250 a week |
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Jean-Luc
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A good, quick rule of thumb (for a 40 hr week) is to double the hourly rate then multiply it by 1000 It's not exact, but its near enough for a quick "head calculation"
£10 doubled 20 times 1000 = approx £20k |
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bud
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£19.500per annum, tell em it's not enough,and you want £12.50per hour lol. |
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Emma
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To work it out you do:-
£10 x 37.5 = 375
x 52 = £19,500
£19,500 is the yearly salary |
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Franco
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All the answers you got so far are wrong.
£10/hr is £375 per week, and in a year you will have 2 weeks annual holiday and 7 days public holidays and perhaps 3 day sickness. So there are only 52- 3.5 = 48.5 working weeks, giving annual earnings before deductions
£375 x 48.5 = 18,187
Not bad. |
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Dylan Mitchell
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It'd be £19,500 a year, or £1625 per calendar month |
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Smokin' Gun
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Add it together and minus 23.4% (approx) for taxes and you have your final figure |
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CLAIRE S
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10*37.5hours*52weeks in a year providing you are being paid for all 52 weeks and not taking holiday time for nothing
£19,500 a year before taxes and NI |
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Mand P
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19,500 gross |
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mel
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37.5 hours at £10 is obviously £375 per week, top rate.
Assuming you get full pay for holidays, that works out at £19,500 per year before tax etc. |
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Eh! say`ello to mi Lidal fwend!
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Gross £19000
Net £14500
about average earnings. |
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Claire S
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19,500 but thats before tax! |
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welshelf
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if you cant work it out I would not give you £10 / hour |
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wolf
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1st..Don't you have a calculator. 2nd..It will depend on your age what tax level your on, and what your marital status is. |
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