Enter pay details
Use the fields below to convert hourly compensation into salary estimates, including overtime, bonus, taxes, and deductions.
Formula used
Hourly Rate × Regular Hours Per Week
Hourly Rate × Overtime Multiplier
Overtime Hourly Rate × Overtime Hours Per Week
((Regular Weekly Pay + Overtime Weekly Pay) × Paid Weeks Per Year) + Annual Bonus
Annual Gross Salary − Estimated Taxes − Other Annual Deductions
Annual Gross Salary ÷ Pay Periods Per Year
How to use this calculator
- Choose the currency you want displayed in the results.
- Enter your base hourly rate and standard weekly hours.
- Add average overtime hours and the overtime multiplier used by your employer.
- Set paid weeks, annual bonus, tax rate, and other yearly deductions.
- Pick the pay period format that matches your payroll schedule.
- Press Calculate salary to show salary totals above the form.
- Review the table and Plotly chart to compare gross, deductions, and net values.
- Use the export buttons to download the current scenario as CSV or PDF.
Example data table
| Scenario | Hourly Rate | Regular Hours | OT Hours | OT Multiplier | Annual Bonus | Annual Gross |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Operations Analyst | $25.00 | 40 | 5 | 1.5 | $3,000 | $64,750.00 |
| Shift Supervisor | $32.00 | 40 | 8 | 2.0 | $4,500 | $97,748.00 |
| Support Specialist | $18.50 | 37.5 | 4 | 1.5 | $1,200 | $42,642.00 |
Frequently asked questions
1. What does hourly to salary conversion mean?
It converts an hourly wage into weekly, monthly, and annual earnings. This version also includes overtime, bonus, taxes, and deductions for a more realistic salary estimate.
2. How is overtime calculated here?
Overtime pay is calculated by multiplying your hourly rate by the overtime multiplier, then multiplying that result by overtime hours worked each week.
3. Why does paid weeks per year matter?
Paid weeks determine how many weeks of earnings are included in the annual salary estimate. A value below 52 can model unpaid leave or seasonal work.
4. Are taxes in this calculator exact?
No. Taxes here are estimated using a simple percentage. Actual tax withholding depends on your location, filing status, benefits, and payroll rules.
5. Can I include bonuses and deductions?
Yes. Add annual bonus to increase gross salary and use other annual deductions for retirement, insurance, or recurring payroll reductions outside tax.
6. What pay periods can I compare?
You can display monthly, semi-monthly, bi-weekly, or weekly estimates. The calculator divides annual totals by the selected number of pay periods.
7. Why is net pay lower than gross pay?
Net pay subtracts estimated taxes and other annual deductions from gross salary. Gross pay is your earnings before those reductions.
8. Can I use this for budgeting or job offers?
Yes. It is useful for comparing offers, budgeting expected income, reviewing overtime impact, and estimating pay under different schedules or raise assumptions.