Skip to main content

Hourly To Salary

Converting an hourly wage to an annual salary seems straightforward — multiply by 2,080 — but the result changes significantly based on actual hours worked, overtime, and unpaid leave. Our calculator handles part-time schedules, overtime hours, and weekly vacation adjustments to give you the accurate equivalent annual, monthly, and biweekly figures for any hourly rate.

Daily (8hr)

$

Weekly

$

Monthly

$

Annual

$

Share this tool
Finance

About the Hourly to Salary Calculator

Converting an hourly wage to an annual salary seems straightforward — multiply by 2,080 — but the result changes significantly based on actual hours worked, overtime, and unpaid leave. Our calculator handles part-time schedules, overtime hours, and weekly vacation adjustments to give you the accurate equivalent annual, monthly, and biweekly figures for any hourly rate.

How to use it

  1. Enter your hourly wage.
  2. Set your hours per week and weeks worked per year.
  3. Add overtime hours per week and overtime multiplier (typically 1.5×) if applicable.
  4. See annual, monthly, bi-weekly, weekly, and daily equivalent earnings.

Formula & methodology

Annual salary = Hourly rate × Hours/week × Weeks/year + (Overtime hours/week × Overtime rate × Weeks/year). Standard: 40 hrs × 52 weeks = 2,080 hours. Part-time 20 hrs: 20 × 52 = 1,040 hours.

Common use cases

  • Comparing a hourly contractor offer to a salaried job
  • Calculating annual income for a mortgage or loan application
  • Understanding the annualized value of a part-time position
  • Negotiating from an hourly rate to an annual salary offer
  • Budgeting when income varies with hours worked

Frequently asked questions

2,080 hours (40 hrs × 52 weeks) is the US standard. Many salaried employees effectively work more without overtime — which is why salaried roles can sometimes pay less per effective hour than they appear.
Only if you work it consistently. Overtime pay is typically 1.5× the regular rate for hours beyond 40/week for non-exempt employees. Salaried exempt employees generally receive no overtime regardless of hours.

Related tools

Related tools

All Tools →

Embed this tool on your site

Free for personal and commercial use. Just copy the snippet below.