Free annual salary to hourly rate calculator. Convert your yearly salary into nominal and effective hourly rates accounting for overtime, holidays, and vacation.
The Annual Salary Per Hour Calculator converts any yearly salary into its true hourly equivalent. Unlike simple division by 2,080, this tool accounts for overtime hours, paid holidays, and vacation days to show both your nominal and effective hourly rate.
Your nominal hourly rate is the standard calculation — annual salary divided by scheduled hours. But if you regularly work overtime without extra pay (common for salaried employees), your effective hourly rate drops. A $65,000 salary at 40 hours is $31.25/hour, but at 50 hours it drops to $25.00. This calculator reveals the real picture.
The comparison table shows how your salary stacks up against common hourly rates, making it easy to evaluate freelance opportunities, side gigs, or job offers quoted as hourly rates. Whether you are negotiating a raise, considering going freelance, or simply curious about your true hourly earnings, this tool provides the clarity you need. Check the example with realistic values before reporting.
Many salaried workers have no idea what they actually earn per hour. This matters when evaluating overtime expectations, freelance side work, or job offers in hourly roles. The effective rate — which factors in actual hours worked — is often much lower than the nominal rate, especially for employees routinely putting in 45-50+ hour weeks.
Nominal Hourly = Annual Salary ÷ (Hours/Week × Weeks/Year) Effective Hourly = Annual Salary ÷ Total Hours Actually Worked Total Hours Worked = (Regular Hours × Actual Weeks Worked) + (OT Hours × Actual Weeks Worked)
Result: $31.25 nominal / $27.08 effective hourly
Nominal: $65,000 ÷ (40 × 52) = $31.25/hr. With 5hr/week OT over 47 actual working weeks, total hours = 2,115. Effective: $65,000 ÷ 2,115 = $30.73/hr.
When comparing a salaried position to an hourly role, most people simply divide the salary by 2,080. But this ignores overtime expectations, benefits value, and paid time off. A $70,000 salary with 50-hour weeks and no overtime pay works out to $26.92/hour — less than some hourly positions that include overtime premiums.
Exempt salaried employees do not receive overtime pay under FLSA rules. If you consistently work 45-50 hours per week, your effective hourly rate drops 12-25% below the nominal rate. Over a career, this represents hundreds of thousands of dollars in uncompensated labor. Understanding this reality helps you negotiate appropriate salaries for roles with heavy overtime expectations.
Knowing your effective hourly rate helps evaluate side income opportunities. If your salary works out to $35/hour effective, a freelance gig paying $40/hour is only a marginal improvement once you account for self-employment taxes and lost personal time. But a $75/hour consulting opportunity clearly exceeds your regular rate.
Divide your annual salary by total work hours. For standard full-time: salary ÷ 2,080 (40 hrs × 52 weeks). For example, $60,000 ÷ 2,080 = $28.85/hr.
The effective hourly rate divides your salary by all hours actually worked, including unpaid overtime. It shows what you truly earn per hour of effort.
Paid holidays do not change your nominal rate (you are paid for those hours). However, they reduce actual hours worked, which can slightly increase your effective hourly earnings.
If you work unpaid overtime, you are spreading the same salary across more hours. Each extra hour of overtime reduces your effective hourly rate.
At 40 hours/week for 52 weeks, $30/hr equals $62,400 annually. Whether this is good depends on location, cost of living, benefits, and career stage.
For total compensation hourly rate, add the dollar value of benefits (employer health insurance, 401k match, etc.) to your salary before dividing by hours.