Calculate your true effective hourly rate by dividing total compensation by total hours worked, including overtime and unpaid work.
Your effective hourly rate is what you truly earn per hour when you factor in all compensation (salary, bonuses, commissions, equity) and all hours actually worked (including unpaid overtime, after-hours emails, and weekend work). It's often very different from your stated hourly or salaried rate.
A software engineer earning $120,000/year at a standard 40 hours/week has a stated rate of $57.69/hour. But if they regularly work 50+ hours with on-call duties and include a $15,000 bonus, the effective rate becomes ($135,000 / 2,600 hours) = $51.92/hour—lower than expected despite the bonus.
This calculator reveals your true hourly compensation by combining all income sources and dividing by actual hours worked. It's a reality check that helps you evaluate whether your time investment is fairly compensated and compare opportunities on equal footing.
This structured approach transforms vague productivity goals into measurable targets, making it easier to track improvement and stay motivated toward meaningful professional achievements.
The effective hourly rate reveals the truth about your compensation relative to your time. It accounts for unpaid overtime, bonuses, and all income sources to show what you actually earn per hour worked—essential for evaluating job satisfaction and comparing opportunities. Consistent measurement creates a reliable baseline for evaluating personal efficiency and identifying the habits and practices that contribute most to achieving professional goals.
Effective Hourly Rate = Total Annual Compensation ÷ Total Hours Worked Total Hours = Actual Hours/Week × Weeks Worked/Year
Result: $42.00/hour
Total compensation: $95,000 + $10,000 = $105,000. Total hours: 50 hours/week × 50 weeks = 2,500 hours. Effective rate: $105,000 ÷ 2,500 = $42.00/hour. The stated rate at 40 hours would be $50.48—the extra hours reduced the effective rate by 17%.
Most salaried employees have never calculated their effective hourly rate. The result is often eye-opening. A prestigious job paying $150,000/year sounds great, but at 60 hours/week it's only $48/hour—less than many experienced freelancers charge.
Every hour of unpaid overtime reduces your effective hourly rate. Over a career, the compounding effect is massive. An employee working 10 extra hours per week for 20 years contributes roughly 10,000 hours of unpaid labor compared to a strict 40-hour worker.
Calculate your effective hourly rate at each career stage. If it's declining despite salary increases (because hours are growing faster), it's time to renegotiate boundaries, delegate more, or explore roles with better work-life balance.
Include base salary, annual bonuses, commissions, stock options/RSUs vested, employer 401(k) match, profit sharing, and any cash allowances. For a complete picture, add the value of health insurance and other benefits.
Use a time-tracking app for 2–4 typical weeks. Include all work activities: meetings, emails, on-call time, commute if you work during it, and weekend work. Most knowledge workers underestimate their actual hours by 5–10 hours/week.
If you work more hours than the standard 40/week without additional pay, your effective rate drops. Every unpaid hour dilutes your compensation. Working 50 hours instead of 40 on a $80,000 salary reduces your hourly rate from $38.46 to $30.77.
No. PTO is time you're paid but not working, which effectively raises your hourly rate. Count only hours actually worked. If you work 48 weeks/year at 45 hours/week, use those numbers.
If a higher-paying job requires significantly more hours, the effective hourly rate might actually be lower. A $90,000 job at 40 hours ($43.27/hr) beats a $110,000 job at 55 hours ($38.46/hr) on an hourly basis.
This varies by field and location. Generally, your effective rate should meet or exceed what you could earn freelancing in your field after accounting for benefits. If the rate is significantly below market freelance rates, you may be undercompensated for your time.