Skip to content
FinToolSuite
Updated April 20, 2026 · Income · Educational use only ·

Weekly to Annual Income Calculator

Annualise weekly earnings.

Convert weekly earnings to annual, monthly, and daily equivalents at standard 52-week assumptions or any custom number of working weeks.

What this tool does

This calculator takes your weekly income and expands it into annual, monthly, and daily equivalents using a standard 52-week year and typical five-day working week. The result shows what that weekly figure represents across different time scales, plus an implied hourly rate based on a standard full-time schedule. The calculation multiplies weekly income by 52 to arrive at the annual total, then divides by 12 for the monthly average and by 5 for the daily rate. This is useful for comparing job offers, understanding take-home patterns, or translating between different pay frequencies. The output assumes consistent weekly earnings throughout the year and a standard working pattern; it does not account for variable hours, seasonal changes, bonuses, or deductions. Results are for illustration only.


Enter Values

People also use

Formula Used
Weekly income

Spotted something off?

Calculations or display — let us know.

Disclaimer

Results are estimates for educational purposes only. They do not constitute financial advice. Consult a qualified professional before making financial decisions.

600/week = 31,200/year, 2,600/month, 120/day. Weekly pay workers often plan weekly; seeing annual helps compare against quoted salary roles or benchmark income against costs that quote annually.

Run it with sensible defaults

Using weekly income of 600, the calculation works out to 31,200.00. The defaults are meant as a starting point, not a recommendation.

How the math works

Weekly × 52 = annual. Monthly = annual / 12. Daily = weekly / 5 (working days).

Why small rate shifts add up

A 3% pay rise looks modest. Apply it over a 30-year career with modest promotions and the lifetime difference runs to six figures. This calculator makes that invisible compounding visible in a way spreadsheets usually don't.

What this doesn't capture

Tax bands, pension contributions, student-loan deductions, and benefits-in-kind sit outside this calculation. The figure is the headline; your actual position depends on local tax rules and personal circumstances. Pair with a dedicated take-home calculator for the full picture.

Related calculations worth running

Plans get firmer when you triangulate. Alongside this one, the annual to monthly salary calculator, the hourly to monthly income calculator, and the upwork earnings calculator tend to come up in the same conversations. Running two or three together exposes inconsistencies in any single assumption — which is usually where the useful insight lives.

Worked example

Suppose your weekly income is 750. The calculator shows:

  • Annual: 39,000
  • Monthly: 3,250
  • Daily (5-day week): 150
  • Hourly (40-hour week): 18.75

If you then receive a pay rise to 800 per week, the annual equivalent moves to 41,600 — a difference of 2,600 per year. Over a decade, that single 50-a-week rise accumulates to 26,000 in additional gross income, before any compounding through further increases.

When this calculation matters

The calculator serves several common situations. When comparing a weekly-paid job offer against a salaried role quoted in annual terms, annualising the weekly figure makes direct comparison possible. When budgeting household expenses that are quoted annually (rent, utilities, insurance), knowing your annualised income frames affordability clearly. When assessing the impact of a pay change or bonus, seeing the annual equivalent shows the true scale of the shift. Freelancers or gig workers paid weekly also use this to model what consistent weekly earnings would mean across a full year.

What the result shows and does not show

This calculator shows gross income across different time periods based on a standard 52-week year and a five-day working week. It illustrates the relationship between weekly and annual figures and derives an implied hourly rate under a standard full-time schedule. It does not account for holidays, sick leave, or weeks where work is not available. It does not include bonuses, overtime, or variable earnings. It does not deduct tax, insurance, pension deductions, or other statutory or voluntary withholdings. The result is a mathematical conversion, not a forecast of actual take-home pay or a statement of future earnings.

For learning purposes

This calculator is for educational illustration. Use it to understand income scaling across time periods and to compare job offers or plan personal budgets. For formal financial planning, income forecasting, or tax assessment, consult relevant local resources or a financial adviser.

Example Scenario

Converting a weekly income of £600 results in an annual income of 31,200.00.

Inputs

Weekly Income:£600
Expected Result31,200.00

This example uses typical values for illustration. Adjust the inputs above to match a specific situation and see how the result changes.

Sources & Methodology

Methodology

This calculator annualises weekly income by multiplying the weekly amount by 52, the standard number of weeks in a year. It then derives monthly income by dividing the annual figure by 12, and daily income by dividing weekly income by 5, which assumes a five-day working week. The model treats income as constant throughout the year and does not account for variations such as holiday periods, unpaid leave, bonuses, or irregular working patterns. It also does not model tax deductions, pension contributions, or other payroll withholdings. Results represent gross income before any such adjustments and should be treated as a simplified annualisation based on the entered weekly rate.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why 52 weeks?
There are 52 weeks in a year. Some workers get 'extra' pay periods if paid every 2 weeks (26 pay periods but 52.143 weeks) — minor adjustment.
Bank holidays affect this?
Depends on pay structure. Weekly-paid workers usually still get paid bank holidays if salaried. Hourly-only workers may lose that pay.
Tax treatment vary?
No — tax is based on total annual income regardless of pay frequency. Weekly conversion helps see full-year tax impact.
Convert 4-weekly?
4-weekly × 13 = annual. Different from monthly (× 12). Check your contract wording.

Related Calculators

More Income Calculators

Explore Other Financial Tools