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Hourly Wage Calculator

Convert your salary between hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, and annual rates. Customize working hours and days. Compare against Germany's minimum wage (Mindestlohn €12.41/hour for 2024).

Hourly Wage Calculator

Germany Wage Reference 2024

Minimum wage (Mindestlohn): €12.41/hour. Standard full-time work week: 40 hours. Legal maximum: 48 hours/week. Annual working hours for a 40h/5-day week: ~2,080 hours. Overtime must be compensated or granted as time off (Überstundenausgleich).

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Germany's Minimum Wage (Mindestlohn) in 2024

Germany's statutory minimum wage (gesetzlicher Mindestlohn) is €12.41 per hour as of January 1, 2024. The Mindestlohnkommission reviews and adjusts this rate every two years. The minimum wage applies to almost all employees in Germany regardless of industry, age (18+), or employment type (full-time, part-time, mini-job). Certain apprentices and interns may have different regulations. Employers violating the minimum wage law face fines up to €500,000.

Converting Between Pay Periods

To convert an hourly rate to an annual salary: multiply the hourly rate × hours per day × days per week × 52 weeks. For a standard German 40-hour/5-day week: Annual = Hourly × 2,080. Monthly = Hourly × 173.3. Daily (8h) = Hourly × 8. Note that this calculator shows gross figures before taxes and social security. Use the Net Salary Calculator to see take-home pay after deductions.

Working Hours Regulations in Germany

German working time law (Arbeitszeitgesetz / ArbZG) regulates that employees cannot work more than 8 hours per day (extendable to 10 hours on some days if averaged over 6 months). The standard full-time week is 38–40 hours depending on industry and collective bargaining agreements (Tarifverträge). Overtime (Überstunden) must be compensated either financially or through time off — check your employment contract (Arbeitsvertrag). Sundays and public holidays are generally protected rest days.

Salary Benchmarks in Germany by Industry

Understanding your hourly rate relative to the market is important. In Germany, typical hourly rates vary significantly by sector: IT professionals earn €25–€60+/hour, engineers €20–€45/hour, healthcare workers €15–€30/hour, retail and hospitality near minimum wage at €12–€15/hour, and finance/consulting professionals €30–€80+/hour. Freelancers (Freiberufler) typically charge 30–50% more per hour than employees to account for taxes, benefits, and non-billable time.

Hourly Wage Calculator – Convert Hourly Rate to Monthly & Annual Salary

Got Questions? We have you covered

Germany's minimum wage (Mindestlohn) is €12.41 per hour as of January 2024, increased from €12.00 in 2023. For a standard 40-hour work week (160 hours/month), this equates to approximately €1,985/month gross, or about €1,555/month net after taxes and social contributions (Tax Class 1).

Most German full-time employees work 38–40 hours per week, with 40 hours being the most common standard. Germany has 365 calendar days, with ~250 working days after subtracting weekends and an average of 10 public holidays. Total annual working hours are typically around 1,900–2,080 hours, depending on holidays, sick days, and vacation (minimum 20 days by law, usually 25–30 days in practice).

At €20/hour working a standard 40-hour week for 52 weeks: Annual gross = €20 × 8 hours × 5 days × 52 weeks = €41,600/year. Monthly gross = €3,467. In Tax Class 1 with standard deductions, this results in approximately €2,250–€2,400 net per month. Our calculator shows all these conversions instantly.

Yes. A freelancer's hourly rate (Stundensatz) must cover not just their working time but also non-billable hours, business expenses, holiday time, periods without clients, health insurance, and pension provisions. As a rule of thumb, freelancers often multiply their desired annual net income by 1.7–2.0 and divide by billable hours (~1,400–1,600/year) to arrive at a minimum hourly rate.

Bruttostundenlohn is your gross hourly wage before deductions. Nettostundenlohn is your effective take-home hourly rate after income tax and social security contributions. For example, if you earn €20/hour gross in Tax Class 1 with a 40h/week job, your effective net hourly rate is approximately €12.50–€13.50/hour after all deductions.

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