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MoneyMath

$55 an Hour Is How Much a Year?

At $55/hr full-time (40 hrs/week, 52 weeks), you earn $114,400/year. Here's the full breakdown — monthly, biweekly, take-home after taxes.

🟢 Updated April 2026👤 Reviewed by MoneyMath Editorial⚡ Runs in your browser · inputs never leave your device
Hourly rate
$55.00/hr
40 hours/week × 52 weeks = 2080 hours/year

Customize hours/week or weeks/year in the main hourly-to-salary calculator.

Annual Gross
$114,400
Monthly$9,533
Biweekly$4,400
Weekly$2,200
Take-home (≈76%)$86,944/yr

$55 an hour is how much a year?

At $55/hour working a standard full-time schedule (40 hours per week × 52 weeks), you earn $114,400 per year before taxes. That breaks down to $9,533/month, $4,400 per biweekly paycheck, or $2,200/week.

Is $55/hour a good wage?

For context, the 2026 federal minimum wage is $7.25/hour, while the median US wage is approximately $25/hour. $At $55/hr, you're in the top 10% of US earners.

Take-home after taxes (approximate)

For a typical single filer in a mid-bracket state, you can expect to lose about 24% to federal tax, FICA, and state tax — leaving roughly $86,944/year net ($7,245/month). This varies significantly by state (no income tax in FL/TX/NV; CA/NY tax heavily).

Part-time and overtime conversions

  • Part-time (20 hrs/week): $57,200/year
  • Full-time with OT (45 hrs/week): $135,850/year
  • Unpaid vacation (2 weeks): $110,000/year

Frequently Asked Questions

Is $55/hour a livable wage?

It depends entirely on your location. In low cost-of-living states (Mississippi, West Virginia, Oklahoma), $55/hr supports a modest single-person lifestyle at $or above the poverty line. In high-COL metros (SF, NYC, Boston), $55/hr is below a living wage for a single adult per MIT's Living Wage calculator.

Does overtime bring my annual higher?

Yes. Non-exempt employees earn 1.5× for hours over 40/week. 5 hours OT/week at $55/hr = $21,450/year extra — a 18.8% raise through overtime alone.

What if I work 52 weeks a year without vacation?

The calculation already assumes 52 weeks. If you receive 2 paid weeks off (standard), you still earn the full 114,400 — paid vacation counts as paid work hours.

How much will my paycheck actually be?

For bi-weekly pay: gross 4,400, take-home after taxes roughly 3,344. Your exact net depends on state, filing status, 401(k), and health insurance deductions.