Everything About $15 an Hour to Yearly
How This Calculation Works
$15 per hour at 40 hours per week for 52 weeks equals $15 × 2,080 = $31,200 per year gross. We use the standard full-time schedule (2,080 hours). The calculator above applies this formula and estimates federal tax so you see your approximate take-home. This rate matches or exceeds the federal minimum in many states and is common for entry-level or part-time work.
Example With Real Numbers
At $15/hr full-time, you earn $31,200 gross per year. That's $2,600 per month or $600 per week before taxes. After federal taxes (about 12% at this level), you'd take home roughly $27,500 per year—about $2,290 per month or $1,058 per biweekly paycheck. State tax and deductions will reduce this further.
When This Calculator Is Useful
Use it when evaluating a $15/hr job offer, budgeting for a minimum-wage role, or comparing hourly vs salary. It helps you see what $15/hr means annually so you can plan rent, bills, and savings. Also useful for students or part-time workers who want to project yearly earnings.
What Can Change the Final Result
Overtime increases earnings; part-time reduces them. Tips and bonuses aren't included. The tax estimate is federal only; state tax, 401(k), and health insurance lower your paycheck. Filing status affects taxes.
FAQ
How much is $15 an hour per year after taxes?
After federal taxes (approx.), $15/hr full-time nets about $27,000–28,000 per year. State tax and deductions will lower your actual take-home.
What does $15 an hour equal weekly?
At 40 hours per week, $15/hr gives you $600 gross per week before any deductions.
How much is $15 an hour monthly?
At 40 hrs/week, $15/hr is about $2,600 gross per month. After federal tax, roughly $2,250 per month take-home.
Is $15 an hour enough to live on?
In many areas, $15/hr is below a living wage for a single adult. It may cover basics in low-cost regions but often falls short for housing, healthcare, and savings in larger cities.
How much is $15 an hour biweekly?
At 80 hours per pay period, $15/hr = $1,200 gross per biweekly check. Take-home is about $1,038 after federal tax.
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This calculator provides an estimate only and is not tax or financial advice. Last updated: March 2025.