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Get Started ≫The National Living Wage (NLW) is the UK's legal minimum hourly rate for workers aged 21 and over, set at £12.71 from 1 April 2026. Younger workers and apprentices have separate National Minimum Wage rates below it.
UK minimum rates from 1 April 2026
The current rates
From 1 April 2026 the NLW is £12.71 an hour for workers 21 and over, with the 18-to-20 rate at £10.85 and the 16-to-17 and apprentice rates at £8.00. The 18-to-20 band still exists but government policy is to narrow it toward a single adult rate, which is why it keeps rising faster than the headline NLW. Rates change every 1 April on the Low Pay Commission's recommendation.
Where employers get caught
Rarely on the headline rate; usually on the arithmetic around it. Unpaid working time (opening duties, security checks, travel between clients), uniform and equipment costs that drag effective pay below the floor, salary-sacrifice schemes that do the same, and salaried staff whose hours creep until the annual salary divided by actual hours dips under the rate. HMRC enforces with arrears, penalties and public naming, and the new Fair Work Agency now carries that enforcement mandate.
The trans-national comparison
Australia's national minimum wage runs on a July cycle set by the Fair Work Commission, with most workers actually floored by higher award classification rates; New Zealand adjusts its adult minimum each April; the UK sets age-banded rates each April with no award layer above them. For employers running staff across countries, the practical point is that all three floors move annually on different cycles, and each country's move lands on a different pay-review calendar.
Wage floors move every April. Model what they do to your labour line.
See how it worksCommon questions
Is the National Living Wage the same as the "real living wage"?
No. The NLW is the legal minimum. The "real living wage" is a higher voluntary benchmark set by the Living Wage Foundation; paying it is a choice, not an obligation.
Does the NLW apply to apprentices?
Apprentices have their own rate (£8.00) if under 19 or in the first year of the apprenticeship; beyond that, the age-appropriate rate applies.
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