UK Working Hours Calendar 2026
For HR professionals, payroll administrators, small business owners, and employees across the United Kingdom, understanding the annual schedule of working days and hours is critical. Standard working hours, monthly contracted periods, and the placement of public bank holidays directly influence payroll calculations, timesheet approvals, overtime allocations, and resource scheduling.
In 2026, there are a total of 253 working days in England and Wales (calculated based on a standard Monday–Friday week and accounting for the 8 statutory bank holidays). Depending on your organisation's standard contractual hours, this translates to:
- 1,897.5 working hours for employees on a standard 37.5-hour week (7.5 hours per day).
- 2,024.0 working hours for employees on a standard 40.0-hour week (8.0 hours per day).
Use the tables, calendar breakdown, and interactive payroll calculator below to reference the exact working days, holiday counts, and hourly conversions for each month of 2026.
Interactive UK Working Hours & Payroll Calculator
Convert annual salary to hourly rates, or estimate monthly timesheet wages for 2026.
UK Working Hours & Days 2026: Reference Table
| Month | Calendar Days | Weekdays (M–F) | Bank Holidays | Net Working Days | Hours (37.5h Week) | Hours (40h Week) | Monthly Equivalent (£) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| January | 31 | 22 | 1 | 21 | 157.5 | 168.0 | - |
| February | 28 | 20 | 0 | 20 | 150.0 | 160.0 | - |
| March | 31 | 22 | 0 | 22 | 165.0 | 176.0 | - |
| April | 30 | 22 | 2 | 20 | 150.0 | 160.0 | - |
| May | 31 | 21 | 2 | 19 | 142.5 | 152.0 | - |
| June | 30 | 22 | 0 | 22 | 165.0 | 176.0 | - |
| July | 31 | 23 | 0 | 23 | 172.5 | 184.0 | - |
| August | 31 | 21 | 1 | 20 | 150.0 | 160.0 | - |
| September | 30 | 22 | 0 | 22 | 165.0 | 176.0 | - |
| October | 31 | 22 | 0 | 22 | 165.0 | 176.0 | - |
| November | 30 | 21 | 0 | 21 | 157.5 | 168.0 | - |
| December | 31 | 23 | 2 | 21 | 157.5 | 168.0 | - |
| Total (2026): | 365 | 261 | 8 | 253 | 1,897.5 | 2,024.0 | - |
* The working hours above represent net working hours for employees working a standard five-day (Monday to Friday) week, excluding public bank holidays (England & Wales).
How Monthly Working Hours are Calculated in the UK
In British employment practice, the calculation of working hours depends heavily on whether an employee is salaried (on a fixed annual wage) or hourly-paid (based on timesheets and hourly rates). Because calendar months contain varying numbers of days and weekends, actual working hours change from month to month. However, standard calculations are required for payroll smoothing, holiday entitlement, and pension contributions.
The Salaried Payroll Formula (Payroll Smoothing)
For salaried employees, a constant monthly gross salary is paid, regardless of whether a month has 19 working days (like May 2026) or 23 working days (like July 2026). To determine the average monthly working hours or to calculate an hourly rate equivalent for overtime, employers use the standard 52.143 weeks multiplier (which represents the exact number of weeks in a standard 365-day year: 365 ÷ 7):
Average Monthly Hours = (Contracted Weekly Hours × 52.143) ÷ 12
Using this statutory standard:
- A standard 37.5-hour work week averages 162.95 contracted hours per month.
- A standard 40-hour work week averages 173.81 contracted hours per month.
Actual Timesheet Calculations
For hourly-paid employees and contractors, payroll is usually calculated based on the actual timesheet hours worked during each pay period. If an employee is not paid for bank holidays, their monthly earnings will drop in months with high numbers of public holidays (such as April and May) unless they work those days at standard or premium rates.
Monthly Working Hours = (Weekdays in Month - Bank Holidays) × Daily Contracted Hours
UK Bank Holidays in 2026
Bank holidays represent statutory public holidays that can alter standard working schedules. In England and Wales, there are 8 official bank holidays in 2026. If a bank holiday falls on a weekend, a substitute day is designated on the nearest following weekday (usually the Monday).
In 2026, Boxing Day (26th December) falls on a Saturday. Consequently, Monday 28th December 2026 is observed as the official substitute bank holiday, creating a four-day Christmas weekend for standard Monday–Friday workers.
Devolved Nations and Regional Variations
It is important for UK employers to note that public bank holiday schedules vary by devolved administration:
- England & Wales: 8 bank holidays. These form the baseline for our reference tables.
- Scotland: 9 bank holidays. Scotland observes 2nd January as a bank holiday, as well as St Andrew's Day (30th November). However, Easter Monday is not an official nationwide bank holiday (though observed by many local councils and banks).
- Northern Ireland: 10 bank holidays. Additional public holidays include St Patrick's Day (17th March) and the Anniversary of the Battle of the Boyne (Orangemen's Day, 13th July substitute).
England & Wales Official 2026 Bank Holidays:
| Bank Holiday Date | Day of the Week | Holiday Name |
|---|---|---|
| 1 January 2026 | Thursday | New Year's Day |
| 3 April 2026 | Friday | Good Friday |
| 6 April 2026 | Monday | Easter Monday |
| 4 May 2026 | Monday | Early May Bank Holiday |
| 25 May 2026 | Monday | Spring Bank Holiday |
| 31 August 2026 | Monday | Summer Bank Holiday |
| 25 December 2026 | Friday | Christmas Day |
| 28 December 2026 | Monday | Boxing Day (Substitute Day) |
Why Monthly Totals Vary Throughout the Year
As observed in the reference table, monthly working days vary significantly. For instance, **May 2026** contains only 19 working days due to two bank holidays (4th and 25th May) and the way weekends fall. Conversely, **July 2026** contains a maximum of 23 working days, with no bank holidays. This leads to a difference of 30 working hours (4 days × 7.5 hours) between these two months, affecting operational planning, temporary labour budgets, and timesheet approvals.
Salaried vs. Hourly-Paid Employees: UK Payroll Differences
UK labour law and payroll conventions treat salaried and hourly-paid employees differently regarding working days and bank holidays:
- Salaried Employees: Contracted hours are fixed annual obligations. Bank holidays are usually included in their basic annual leave entitlement (e.g. 28 days of statutory leave, comprised of 20 days holiday plus 8 bank holidays). Their monthly salary remains uniform.
- Hourly-Paid Employees: Pay fluctuates based on the number of actual days worked in a month. Employers must track timesheets accurately. If the workplace is closed on a bank holiday, whether the hourly worker is paid depends entirely on the clauses in their contract of employment. If paid, it must be recorded as paid holiday.
- Overtime Calculations: For salaried workers, hourly rates for overtime are calculated by dividing the gross annual salary by 52.143 and then by the contracted weekly hours. For hourly workers, overtime rates (e.g., time-and-a-half or double-time) are multipliers applied directly to their base hourly rate.
UK Working Hours & Bank Holidays 2026 by Month
A detailed breakdown of monthly calendar days, weekdays, bank holidays, and contracted hours for England and Wales.
January 2026
The year begins with a Thursday bank holiday. January contains 22 weekdays, leaving 21 active working days.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | 157.5 hours | 168.0 hours | New Year's Day (1 Jan) |
February 2026
February contains no bank holidays and spans exactly 4 full weeks in 2026, totaling 20 working days.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 150.0 hours | 160.0 hours | None |
March 2026
March has 22 weekdays and no bank holidays in England & Wales, providing a standard, stable working month.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | 165.0 hours | 176.0 hours | None |
April 2026
Easter occurs in early April, introducing two bank holidays that reduce working days to 20.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 150.0 hours | 160.0 hours | Good Friday (3 Apr), Easter Monday (6 Apr) |
May 2026
May is the shortest working month of the year with two bank holidays and 21 weekdays, leaving only 19 working days.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 19 | 142.5 hours | 152.0 hours | Early May Bank Holiday (4 May), Spring Bank Holiday (25 May) |
June 2026
June has 22 weekdays and no bank holidays, marking a return to full capacity for businesses.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | 165.0 hours | 176.0 hours | None |
July 2026
July is the longest working month of 2026 with 23 weekdays and no bank holidays, representing peak output.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 23 | 172.5 hours | 184.0 hours | None |
August 2026
August has 21 weekdays and the late summer bank holiday, resulting in 20 working days.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 20 | 150.0 hours | 160.0 hours | Summer Bank Holiday (31 Aug) |
September 2026
September contains 22 weekdays and no bank holidays, bringing standard working hours back to 165 or 176 hours.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | 165.0 hours | 176.0 hours | None |
October 2026
October matches September with 22 active working days and no public holidays in England & Wales.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 22 | 165.0 hours | 176.0 hours | None |
November 2026
November has 21 weekdays and no public holidays, leaving 21 active working days.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | 157.5 hours | 168.0 hours | None |
December 2026
December has 23 weekdays, but two bank holidays (Christmas and the Boxing Day substitute) reduce working days to 21.
| Working Days | 37.5h Week Hours | 40h Week Hours | Bank Holidays affecting Weekdays |
|---|---|---|---|
| 21 | 157.5 hours | 168.0 hours | Christmas Day (25 Dec), Boxing Day substitute (28 Dec) |
Practical Examples: 2026 Working Schedules
Example 1: Salaried Full-Time Worker (37.5 Hours/Week)
An employee has an annual gross salary of £42,000 working a standard 37.5-hour week (Monday to Friday, 7.5 hours per day). Their contract states that bank holidays are included in their annual leave. Under standard UK payroll rules:
- Monthly Gross Pay: Fixed at £3,500.00 (£42,000 ÷ 12) every month.
- Statutory Hourly Rate: £21.48/h (£3,500.00 ÷ 162.95 average monthly hours).
- Actual Working Days: Ranges from 19 days in May to 23 days in July. However, their salary remains the same, meaning their "effective rate per worked hour" is slightly higher in May than in July.
Example 2: Hourly-Paid Full-Time Worker (40 Hours/Week)
An employee is paid an hourly rate of £15.00 for a 40-hour week (8 hours per day, Monday to Friday). Their employment contract specifies that they are not paid for bank holidays when the business is closed, and they must take them as unpaid leave:
- In July 2026 (23 working days): They work 184 hours. Monthly gross pay is £2,760.00 (184 × £15.00).
- In May 2026 (19 working days, 2 bank holidays): They work 152 hours. Monthly gross pay is £2,280.00 (152 × £15.00).
- Impact: The hourly worker earns £480.00 less in May than in July due to bank holidays and calendar variation.
Example 3: Part-Time Employee (20 Hours/Week)
A part-time employee works 20 hours per week (4 hours per day, Monday to Friday) at £12.00/hour. They are entitled to a pro-rata share of paid bank holidays (which is 4.0 hours per bank holiday day in England & Wales):
- Annual hours: 253 working days × 4 hours/day = 1,012 working hours (excluding bank holidays). With bank holidays, it totals 1,044 hours.
- In May 2026 (19 working days, 2 bank holidays): If paid for bank holidays, they receive 19 days × 4h = 76h of work, plus 2 bank holidays × 4h = 8h paid time off, totaling 84 hours of pay (£1,008.00). If unpaid, they receive £912.00.
Example 4: Shift Worker / Compressed Hours
A shift worker operates on compressed hours, working 37.5 hours per week over 4 days (9.375 hours per day, Tuesday to Friday). Bank holidays falling on Mondays (like Easter Monday, Early May, Spring Bank, and Summer Bank Holidays) do not fall on their scheduled workdays. By law, their employer must ensure they receive a pro-rata equivalent of bank holiday leave to prevent them from being disadvantaged compared to Monday–Friday staff.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
Are employers in the UK legally required to pay for bank holidays?
No. There is no automatic statutory right to paid time off on bank holidays, nor is there a right to be paid extra (e.g. double-time) if you work them. Whether you are paid for bank holidays or receive premium pay depends entirely on the terms of your employment contract. However, bank holidays can count towards your statutory 28-day annual leave entitlement.
What is the "52.143 weeks" factor used in payroll?
A calendar year has 365 days (or 366 in leap years). Dividing 365 days by 7 days in a week results in exactly 52.143 weeks (52 weeks and 1 day). Payroll systems use this multiplier to convert weekly hours or pay to monthly equivalents, avoiding the slight annual underpayment that would occur if they used a flat factor of 52.00 weeks.
How does a leap year affect these calculations?
2026 is a standard year of 365 days. In leap years (like 2028), the year has 366 days, which usually adds an extra weekday (262 weekdays total) depending on where the leap day (29th February) falls in the weekly cycle. This increases the total annual working hours and requires payroll adjustments using a factor of 52.286 weeks (366 ÷ 7).
What happens if a part-time worker's scheduled day doesn't fall on a bank holiday?
Under the Part-time Workers (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations, part-time employees are entitled to a pro-rata allowance of bank holidays, regardless of which days of the week they work. If they do not work on Mondays, they are still entitled to a pro-rata credit of annual leave to ensure fairness.
Conclusion
Accurately mapping and calculating UK working hours for 2026 ensures transparent timesheet processing, compliant payroll operation, and balanced staff scheduling. While salaried roles maintain consistent financial outputs monthly, payroll administrators must remain vigilant about monthly working day variances and regional bank holiday differences across England, Scotland, and Northern Ireland.
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