Salary to Hourly Calculator

Convert your annual salary to an hourly rate, with daily, weekly, biweekly, and monthly equivalents.

$

Hourly rate

$36.06

PeriodAmount
Hourly$36
Daily$288
Weekly$1,442
Biweekly$2,885
Monthly$6,250
Annual$75,000

This converts gross salary to gross hourly rate. Does not include taxes or deductions.

How it works

The salary to hourly conversion divides your annual salary by the total working hours in a year.

Formula: Hourly Rate = Annual Salary ÷ (Hours per Week × Weeks per Year)

For a standard full-time schedule (40 hours/week, 52 weeks/year), you divide by 2,080. If you take unpaid time off, reduce the weeks. If you work more than 40 hours, increase the hours — this shows your effective hourly rate including overtime.

Other pay periods are derived from the hourly rate: daily = hourly × daily hours, weekly = hourly × weekly hours, biweekly = weekly × 2, monthly = annual ÷ 12.

Common salary conversions

Annual Monthly Biweekly Weekly Hourly
$40,000$3,333$1,538$769$19.23
$50,000$4,167$1,923$962$24.04
$60,000$5,000$2,308$1,154$28.85
$75,000$6,250$2,885$1,442$36.06
$100,000$8,333$3,846$1,923$48.08
$150,000$12,500$5,769$2,885$72.12

Based on 40 hours/week, 52 weeks/year.

FAQ

How do I convert my salary to an hourly rate?

Divide your annual salary by 2,080 (40 hours × 52 weeks). For a $75,000 salary: $75,000 ÷ 2,080 = $36.06/hour.

How many work hours are in a year?

A standard full-time year has 2,080 hours. With 2 weeks vacation: 2,000 hours. Adjust for your actual schedule.

Does this account for taxes?

No. This shows gross pay conversion. For after-tax calculations, use our Paycheck Estimator.

What if I work part-time?

Enter your actual hours per week. A $30,000 salary at 20 hours/week equals $28.85/hour — higher than the full-time equivalent because you work fewer hours.

What is the hourly rate for a $50,000 salary?

$50,000 ÷ 2,080 = $24.04/hour. That's $192.31/day, $961.54/week, or $4,166.67/month.

Related tools

This calculator provides gross pay conversions based on your inputs. It does not account for taxes, deductions, or benefits. For tax estimates, try our Paycheck Estimator.