Jack Tools

Pay Rise Calculator

Estimate your new salary after a percentage increase, a fixed annual rise, or a combination of both.

Enter salary details

£
%
£

Enter your current salary and pay rise percentage to see your new salary and estimated extra earnings.

New salary
£0.00
Annual increase: £0.00
Annual increase
£0.00
Monthly increase
£0.00
Weekly increase
£0.00
Total uplift
0.00%

Pay rise breakdown

Current salary £0.00
Percentage rise 0.00%
Fixed increase £0.00
Total increase £0.00

How This Pay Rise Calculator Works

This pay rise calculator estimates how much your salary could increase after a percentage pay rise, a fixed annual increase, or a combination of both. It shows your new annual salary along with the extra amount per year, month, and week.

The percentage increase is calculated from your current salary. Any optional fixed increase is then added on top, giving you a total annual uplift and a new salary estimate.

This makes the calculator useful for annual reviews, promotion discussions, job offers, union settlements, and general salary planning when you want to compare different rise scenarios.

It is designed for gross annual salary figures, so it helps you understand the headline change before tax rather than your final take-home pay.

Current salary Your existing annual salary before any pay rise is applied.
Pay rise percentage The percentage increase applied to your current salary, such as 3%, 5%, or 10%.
Fixed annual increase An optional extra amount added to your salary on top of any percentage increase.
New salary The calculator shows your updated annual salary and the estimated increase over different time periods.

Example Pay Rise Calculations

5% pay rise
Current salary£30,000
Pay rise5%
Annual increase£1,500
New salary = £31,500
10% pay rise
Current salary£45,000
Pay rise10%
Annual increase£4,500
New salary = £49,500
3% plus fixed increase
Current salary£60,000
3% rise£1,800
Fixed increase£1,000
New salary = £62,800
Flat increase only
Current salary£25,000
Pay rise0%
Fixed increase£2,000
New salary = £27,000

Pay Rise Calculator FAQs

This calculator estimates your new salary after a pay rise and shows how much extra that increase adds per year, month, and week.
A percentage pay rise is calculated by multiplying your current salary by the percentage increase, then adding that extra amount to your original salary.
Yes. This calculator lets you combine a percentage increase with an additional fixed annual amount for a more flexible estimate.
No. This calculator works with gross salary before tax. To estimate take-home pay, use your salary after tax calculator separately.
Yes. It is useful for comparing pay rises from promotions, annual reviews, union settlements, and new salary offers.
Total uplift shows the overall increase as a percentage of your current salary after combining both the percentage rise and any fixed annual increase.