Minimum wage
Contents
The rights set out in this section apply to workers (individuals contracted to provide work or services on a full-time, part-time or fixed-term basis). This includes employees, but not self-employed staff. For more information, see Employees, workers and the self-employed.
Almost all UK workers have a legal right to a minimum level of pay, called either the National Living Wage (for those aged 21 and over) or the National Minimum Wage. The level is set by the government each year based on the recommendations of the independent Low Pay Commission (LPC).
What is the minimum wage?
With a few exceptions, all workers in the UK aged 16 or over are legally entitled to be paid a minimum amount per hour. This is regardless of the kind of work they do or the size and type of company.
How much is the minimum wage?
There are different rates for different age groups. There is also a different rate for apprentices who are either under 19 or in the first year of their apprenticeship.
The rates change every year in April. See GOV.UK for the current rates.
Your average hourly pay must be at least the minimum wage. To work this out you first add up everything you've earned over a period (called the 'reference period' - normally a week), including any bonuses and commission. You then deduct any payments that do not count towards the minimum wage and divide the balance by the number of hours you worked in that period to get your average pay. Find out more about calculating your pay on GOV.UK.
Employers who pay workers on a piece-rate basis either have to pay their workers the minimum wage for each hour worked or have to set a fair rate which allows their workers to earn the minimum wage. (Piecework – sometimes called 'output work' – is work where you're paid for making or processing a number of items, or for completing a number of tasks. It is often done from home.) See GOV.UK for more details.
Who can get the minimum wage?
Almost everyone who works in the UK is legally entitled to be paid the minimum wage. This is the case even if an employer asks a worker to sign an employment contract at a lower rate of pay. It isn't necessary to be in full-time employment, or to work at an employer's premises. For example, you're entitled to receive the minimum wage if you're:
- Employed by an agency
- A home worker
- A part-time worker
- A casual worker
- A pieceworker
- A worker on a short-term contract
Your right to the minimum wage depends on your employment status. In order to qualify, you need to be a 'worker'.
For more information, see our 'Employees, workers and the self-employed' section.
You are not entitled to receive the minimum wage if you're:
- A worker under school leaving age (you're under school leaving age in England until the end of the summer term of the school year in which you turn 16; in Scotland it's the last date in May or the first day of the Christmas holidays / 21 December depending on when your 16th birthday is and in Northern Ireland it is 30 June, if you turn 16 on or before 1 July in that year)
- Self-employed
- An apprentice (in some cases)
- An au pair
- In the armed services
- A voluntary worker or doing work experience
In Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland, agricultural workers have separate pay rates set by each country's Agricultural Wages Board.
What payments do not count towards the minimum wage?
- If your employer pays for or subsidises meals, uniforms, private health care, motoring costs or other 'benefits in kind', these don't count towards the calculation of the minimum wage, even if they're taxed as income
- Loans from your employer
- Expenses paid to you by your employer for travelling to a temporary workplace, which is treated by your employer as deductions from earnings under section 338 of the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003. i.e. if your employer operates a scheme where you sacrifice a proportion of your salary that is replaced with a 'tax free' expenses payment for travelling to a temporary workplace.
- Pension payments
- Payment for working overtime
- Retirement lump sums
- Redundancy payments
- Tips, gratuities or service charges paid (even if paid through the payroll)
Note: although tips don't count towards the minimum wage, there other rules that apply to all workers (i.e. employees, agency staff and zero-hours workers, but not self-employed people). Employers in England, Wales and Scotland must:
- Ensure that 100% of all customer tips, including those paid by credit card, are distributed to staff without any deductions. It will be unlawful to deduct bank or administrative charges from tips.
- Pay you in full no later than the end of the month in which the tip was paid by the customer.
- Have a written policy on distribution of tips to staff and follow a Statutory Code of Practice.
The accommodation offset
An employer who provides accommodation to a worker is allowed to count an amount, known as the accommodation offset, towards their minimum wage calculation, even if it is being provided free of charge. See GOV.UK for the current accommodation offset rate.
What to do if you're not being paid enough
The minimum wage is a specific hourly rate that includes your basic pay, plus extra money such as incentives and bonuses. If you get a regional allowance (like London Weighting) rolled on top of your basic pay, that doesn't count. Neither does extra money for shift working or overtime.
All workers have the right to be given a document setting out how their pay is calculated. If you think you're not getting what you are entitled to, try talking to your employer, who may have made a simple mistake. If this doesn't help, or if you don't want to speak to your employer, you can contact Acas or (for Northern Ireland) The Labour Relations Agency for help.
Not paying you the minimum wage, if you are entitled to it, can also count as an unlawful deduction from wages.