[PayBrackets]States

$15 an Hour Is How Much a Year? (2026)

$15 an hour is $31,200 a yearbefore taxes, working full-time (40 hours/week, 52 weeks). That's $2,600 a month, $1,200 biweekly, or $600 a week. After taxes, a single filer keeps between $25,349 and $27,249 depending on the state. See the full state-by-state table below.

$15/hour converted to every pay period

Yearly

$31,200

Monthly

$2,600

Biweekly

$1,200

Weekly

$600

Daily (8h)

$120

The math: $15 × 40 hours × 52 weeks = 31,200. Working 2,080 hours a year, every $1/hour of wage adds $2,080 to annual pay.

$15 an hour after taxes, in all 50 states

Single filer earning $31,200 (2026 rates, standard deduction). Sorted by take-home pay.

StateTake-home / yearTake-home / monthState income taxEffective rate
Alaska$27,249$2,271None12.7%
Florida$27,249$2,271None12.7%
Nevada$27,249$2,271None12.7%
New Hampshire$27,249$2,271None12.7%
North Dakota$27,249$2,271None12.7%
South Dakota$27,249$2,271None12.7%
Tennessee$27,249$2,271None12.7%
Texas$27,249$2,271None12.7%
Wyoming$27,249$2,271None12.7%
Ohio$27,174$2,264$7612.9%
Washington$27,068$2,256$18113.2%
New Mexico$26,860$2,238$39013.9%
New Jersey$26,791$2,233$45914.1%
Mississippi$26,733$2,228$51614.3%
Missouri$26,720$2,227$52914.4%
Connecticut$26,716$2,226$53314.4%
Iowa$26,715$2,226$53414.4%
Idaho$26,704$2,225$54514.4%
Louisiana$26,699$2,225$55014.4%
Rhode Island$26,696$2,225$55314.4%
Nebraska$26,684$2,224$56514.5%
Arizona$26,678$2,223$57114.5%
Utah$26,642$2,220$60714.6%
Vermont$26,638$2,220$61114.6%
Wisconsin$26,599$2,217$65014.7%
California$26,594$2,216$65514.8%
Colorado$26,585$2,215$66414.8%
Washington, D.C.$26,543$2,212$70614.9%
Montana$26,540$2,212$71014.9%
South Carolina$26,534$2,211$71515.0%
North Carolina$26,513$2,209$73615.0%
West Virginia$26,443$2,204$80615.2%
Minnesota$26,399$2,200$85115.4%
Oklahoma$26,391$2,199$85915.4%
Indiana$26,358$2,197$89115.5%
Pennsylvania$26,291$2,191$95815.7%
Kansas$26,291$2,191$95915.7%
Hawaii$26,277$2,190$97215.8%
Kentucky$26,275$2,190$97415.8%
Virginia$26,269$2,189$98015.8%
Georgia$26,253$2,188$99615.9%
Arkansas$26,245$2,187$1,00415.9%
Maine$26,231$2,186$1,01815.9%
Delaware$26,194$2,183$1,05516.0%
Michigan$26,174$2,181$1,07516.1%
New York$26,161$2,180$1,08816.1%
Maryland$26,131$2,178$1,11816.2%
Alabama$25,929$2,161$1,32016.9%
Illinois$25,850$2,154$1,40017.1%
Massachusetts$25,766$2,147$1,48417.4%
Oregon$25,349$2,112$1,90018.8%

Part-time at $15/hour

Hours / weekWeekly payYearly pay (gross)
20 hours$300$15,600
25 hours$375$19,500
30 hours$450$23,400
35 hours$525$27,300

Check your exact take-home pay

$

Estimated take-home pay · Texas

$27,249 / year

Monthly

$2,271

Biweekly

$1,048

Hourly

$13.10

Take-homeFederal taxState taxFICA
Gross pay
$31,200
Federal income tax
$1,564
TX state income tax
$0
Social Security (6.2%)
$1,934
Medicare (1.45%)
$452
Take-home pay
$27,249
Effective tax rate
12.7%

Related wages

$15/hour FAQ

$15 an hour is how much a year?+

$15 per hour is $31,200 per year for full-time work (40 hours/week × 52 weeks). That's $2,600 per month, $1,200 biweekly, or $600 per week before taxes.

$15 an hour is how much a year after taxes?+

After federal tax and FICA, a single filer earning $15/hour ($31,200/year) takes home about $27,249 in a no-income-tax state like Texas, and about $26,594 in California. That works out to roughly $12.79 to $13.10 per hour worked, depending on your state.

Is $15 an hour a good wage in 2026?+

$15/hour ($31,200/year full-time) is below the US median full-time wage of roughly $60,000 to $63,000 in 2026. Whether it's comfortable depends heavily on your state's taxes and cost of living; the same wage stretches much further in Texas than in California or New York.

How much is $15 an hour working part-time?+

At $15/hour: 20 hours/week is $15,600/year, 25 hours is $19,500/year, 30 hours is $23,400/year, and 35 hours is $27,300/year, all before taxes.

What's the biweekly paycheck for $15 an hour?+

Full-time at $15/hour, the gross biweekly paycheck is $1,200 (80 hours). After taxes a single filer typically keeps about $1,048 per biweekly check in a no-tax state.