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Pro rata/Hourly rate question..?

15 replies

Gmex31 · 28/07/2016 20:56

Hi guys,
So I've been offered a job as an Education Support Worker at a local college and I'm a bit confused regarding the salary...
The annual salary says £15,423 pro rata.
Anyone know what that works out as an hourly rate of working full time?
And does pro rata mean term time only?

Anyone who could help I'd be very grateful! :)
Thanks.

OP posts:
ChunkyMonkey4321 · 28/07/2016 20:59

Pro rata means that if you works 37-40 hours a week all year round then you would earn £15423. go on something like salary calculator.co.uk and it might be able to work it out. Maybe divide the annual amount by 52 then times by 38 ( or however many weeks in the term)

strongandlong · 28/07/2016 21:00

That means £15,423 if you work full time, or (e.g) half that if you work half time.

Hourly rate will depend on how many hours is full time (35? 40?) and how much leave you get.

LIZS · 28/07/2016 21:02

That sounds like the full time all year annual salary. Usually 35 or 37.5 hours for 52 weeks. What terms is the job being advertised as? "Termtime" could be 35 or 39 weeks for example.

TheoriginalLEM · 28/07/2016 21:06

i had a job like this . At 16k per year they paid me only for the days i worked and spread that over the year - it was less than minimum wage

TheoriginalLEM · 28/07/2016 21:09

based on working 38 weeksit will be about 216 a week before tax and ni

TheoriginalLEM · 28/07/2016 21:11

based on 37 hr week - 5.83/hr but youll get paid for the holidays

Gmex31 · 28/07/2016 21:12

Thanks for your speedy replys everyone! My contract states the salary is an annual salary and doesn't say anything about term time.

The job is casual hours, although they did say they have enough work to offer me full time (37.5 hrs). Anyone know how to work out the hourly rate based on doing full time hours..? Thanks again!

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LIZS · 28/07/2016 21:23

I make that about £7.90 phr , plus there would be a small amount to add on as holiday pay if paid hourly. Is it a zero hours contract? If so, bear in mind the fe sector is under increasing financial pressure and support workers are often the first to be cut back,

Gmex31 · 28/07/2016 21:25

Thanks Liz. Yes I suppose you could say it's zero hours contract with it being bank/casual.

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lougle · 28/07/2016 21:27

£15,423×(39/52.143)=£11535.53 gross. Assuming that term time means 39 weeks per year.

lougle · 28/07/2016 21:28

Yes, I make it £7.89 per hour (11535.53÷39÷37.5).

lougle · 28/07/2016 21:31

LIZS, you're right. 5.6 weeks holiday minimum. That takes it up to £9.21 per hour.

Gmex31 · 28/07/2016 21:36

I'm not sure I get holiday pay...? It doesn't say in my contract. Or is that something I should automatically get? Thanks again for all your help. :)

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lougle · 28/07/2016 21:38

It's law. You won't be able to take it in term time, but you'll get paid money in lieu of it added into your hourly rate. The idea is that you save that portion up so that it covers the weeks of unpaid time off that are technically holiday.

Gmex31 · 28/07/2016 21:42

Oh I see. Thanks lougle.

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