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BRANAGANS
Accountancy Services Ltd
01709 327 215 | info@branagans.co.uk
Employees must be paid the minimum wage for all the hours they work, and while you may think you pay the right amount, it is important to check you have paid everything due.
The basic calculation to determine you have met your obligations in relation to the National Minimum Wage (NMW) can be done by dividing total pay by the number of hours worked in the reference period -
From April 2026, these rise to £12.71 an hour for anyone aged 21 or above, £10.85 for anyone aged 18 to 20, and £8 an hour for those aged 16 and 17 or apprentices.
When calculating if your staff have received the NMW for all their hours, you need to consider every extra hour they may have worked, which is where the calculation can become more complex.
This may seem simple to answer, but there are times when you may not realise that employees should be paid for additional time they have worked.
For example, any time they have stayed late to finish a piece of work, even if they volunteered to do so, still counts towards their hours. If they open or close the office or other commercial premises in the morning or evening, that time counts towards their work hours. So does training, if they're required to do it, and any other time they are on site and required to work.
You can't exempt yourself from paying for these hours by thinking 'they're salaried', or 'they volunteered to do it'. No matter why they are at work for longer than the hours they are expected to be, they must be paid the NMW for all of them.
To make sure each person's pay is at the right level, you need to consider the employee's basic pay, any bonuses they may have been paid over and above their basic pay -
You don't need to include overtime paid at a premium rate, such as time and a half or double time at Christmas or Easter, for example. You also don't include expenses, benefits-
Once you have all this information, you can do the calculation to determine that all the hours worked have been paid at the NMW or above. But employers can be caught out if an employee is paid, say, a £100 day rate, and they work a 12-
If you are unsure about how to do these calculations, or simply want reassurance that you're doing everything right, then please contact us on 01709 327 215 or email info@branagans.co.uk and we will do everything we can to assist you.
