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💼 Salary Calculator

Convert between hourly, daily, weekly, monthly, and annual salary.

📅 This calculator is based on China's current individual income tax law (the 7-bracket progressive comprehensive-income system in effect since 2019), social insurance, and housing provident fund rules. Exact contribution rates, contribution-base floors/ceilings, and the year-end bonus tax option vary by city, employer, and the latest policy — verify current rules with your local social insurance bureau and the State Taxation Administration.

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01

How to Calculate Annual Salary from Hourly Wage in China

The basic formula for converting an hourly wage into annual salary is: Annual Salary = Hourly Rate × Hours Per Week × 52 weeks. This assumes full-time work with no unpaid time off. Under China's Labor Law, standard working hours are 40 hours per week (8 hours/day, 5 days/week). There are 11 statutory public holidays per year, and most employers also grant 5-15 days of paid annual leave depending on tenure (per the Regulation on Paid Annual Leave for Employees: 5 days for 1-10 years of service, 10 days for 10-20 years, 15 days for 20+ years). A more realistic calculation therefore assumes roughly 49-50 working weeks per year. For example, ¥100/hour × 40 hours/week × 50 weeks ≈ ¥200,000 per year. Minimum hourly wage standards vary widely by province and city (roughly ¥20-¥25 in 2024 in higher-cost regions such as Shanghai and Beijing, lower in smaller cities) — this calculator does not hard-code any single city's minimum wage, so check your local human resources and social security bureau for the current figure. When evaluating an offer, look beyond base pay to total compensation: the mandatory "five insurances and one housing fund" (五险一金 — pension, medical, unemployment, work injury, and maternity insurance, plus the housing provident fund), the year-end bonus (often called "13th-month pay"), and meal or transport allowances.

02

Hourly-to-Monthly Calculator: Full-Time, Part-Time, and Dispatch Work Compared

Full-time employees in China are protected by the Labor Contract Law, with standard hours capped at 40/week. "Non-full-time employment" (part-time) is paid hourly, capped at 4 hours/day and 24 hours/week, has no probation period, and either party may terminate it at any time. Full-time staff receive statutory benefits beyond wages — social insurance, the housing fund, paid annual leave, and sick pay — while part-time workers are typically only covered for work-injury insurance, with other benefits left to the employer's discretion. Dispatched or agency workers (劳务派遣) are legally entitled to "equal pay for equal work" versus directly-hired staff doing the same job, though gaps in practice still exist. Freelancers who pay social insurance themselves as "flexibly employed persons" (灵活就业人员) must cover the full pension and medical premiums (rates vary by city) and are generally not eligible for the housing provident fund — so at the same gross pay, a freelancer's effective coverage is usually lower than a full-time employee's.

03

Gross vs Net Salary in China: Individual Income Tax, Social Insurance, and the Housing Fund

Gross salary is total pay before any deductions. Net (take-home) pay is what remains after the mandatory "five insurances and one housing fund" — employee-side pension (about 8%), medical (about 2% plus a small flat fee), and unemployment insurance (about 0.5%), plus the housing provident fund (typically 5%-12%, set by each city and employer) — and after individual income tax (个人所得税). China taxes wage income under a comprehensive annual settlement system with 7 progressive brackets: on annual taxable income (monthly pay minus the RMB 5,000/month standard deduction, minus social insurance and housing fund contributions, minus itemized special deductions), the rate is 3% up to RMB 36,000, 10% from RMB 36,000-144,000, 20% from RMB 144,000-300,000, 25% from RMB 300,000-420,000, 30% from RMB 420,000-660,000, 35% from RMB 660,000-960,000, and 45% above RMB 960,000. Itemized special deductions (children's education, continuing education, major medical expenses, mortgage interest or rent, elderly-care support, and childcare for children under 3) can further reduce taxable income. The year-end bonus can be taxed either separately (using a bonus-divided-by-12 rate table) or combined with regular annual income — employees should compare both, and check the latest State Taxation Administration notice, since the separate-taxation option for bonuses has historically been extended on a rolling basis rather than made permanent. Social insurance contribution bases (and their floors and ceilings) are generally higher in first-tier cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen), so the absolute amount withheld for "five insurances and one fund" tends to be higher there too, even at the same salary.

04

Salary Negotiation Strategies in the Chinese Job Market

Effective negotiation can meaningfully raise lifetime earnings. Before negotiating, research market pay ranges for your role on platforms such as Liepin, Lagou, or Boss Zhipin, and via industry salary reports, and try to let the employer name a figure first rather than volunteering your own expectation. Beyond base monthly pay, pay attention to the year-end bonus ratio and its conditions (is it tied to individual or company performance, and does it require still being employed on the payout date?), the social-insurance and housing-fund contribution base (some employers contribute on the legal minimum base to cut costs, which raises take-home pay slightly now but reduces your pension and housing-fund balance over time), stock options or RSUs (common at large tech firms), and allowances for meals, transport, and housing, plus health checkups and supplementary private medical insurance. Changing employers typically yields a 10%-30% raise depending on industry demand and how scarce your skills are, but job-hopping too frequently (under 1-2 years per role) can be read as a stability red flag by interviewers.

05

Overtime Pay Calculator: China's Labor Law Overtime Rules

Under Article 44 of the PRC Labor Law, employers must pay at least 150% of regular wages for overtime on a normal working day; at least 200% for work on a rest day that cannot be compensated with time off instead; and at least 300% for work on a statutory public holiday. For example, at a monthly salary of ¥15,000 with 21.75 paid days per month and 8 hours/day, the daily wage is about ¥689.7 and the hourly wage about ¥86.2 — one hour of weekday overtime should be paid roughly ¥129.3 (150%), one hour on a rest day about ¥172.4 (200%), and one hour on a statutory holiday about ¥258.6 (300%). The "996" schedule (9am-9pm, six days a week) common in tech and finance, if unpaid or imposed without agreement, may violate the Labor Law — employees can file a complaint with the local labor inspection bureau or apply for labor arbitration. Management roles and certain positions approved for a "no fixed hours" or "comprehensive working-hours" system are exempt from the standard overtime formula (subject to labor-bureau approval), though rest-time protections still apply.

06

Valuing "Five Insurances and One Fund" and Other Benefits: Total Compensation Beyond Salary

Chinese employee compensation extends well beyond gross pay. Of the "five insurances and one fund," pension insurance provides a basic retirement benefit, medical insurance reimburses outpatient and inpatient costs, unemployment insurance pays benefits if you lose your job through no fault of your own, and work-injury and maternity insurance are funded entirely by the employer (no employee contribution). The housing provident fund (住房公积金) is a distinctively Chinese mandatory long-term housing savings scheme: employee and employer contribute the same percentage (typically 5%-12%, often at the higher end or on a higher contribution-base ceiling in first-tier cities) into the employee's personal account, which can be used for preferential-rate home loans or withdrawn for rent — the balance grows substantial over a career. The year-end bonus (often "13th-month pay," or a performance bonus that can range from roughly 1 to 6+ months' salary in tech and finance) is a major share of total pay. When comparing offers, sum base salary, expected year-end bonus, the social-insurance and housing-fund contribution base, meal and transport allowances, and any stock options into an annual "total package" rather than comparing only monthly gross or take-home pay.

07

Cost-of-Living Adjustments: Comparing Salaries Across Chinese Cities

Where you live dramatically affects the salary you need and your real purchasing power. Housing prices, rent, and living costs in first-tier cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Shenzhen) run far higher than in "new first-tier" and second- or third-tier cities (Chengdu, Wuhan, Xi'an, Changsha, Zhengzhou, and others) — city-center 2-bedroom rents in Shanghai, Beijing, and Shenzhen are commonly several times those in inland second-tier cities, and the home-price gap is even wider (we deliberately avoid quoting specific RMB figures here, since they date quickly — check a live property portal for current numbers). Social-insurance and housing-fund contribution bases (floors and ceilings) are also set higher in first-tier cities, so the absolute "five insurances and one fund" deduction is larger there, but so is the eventual pension and housing-fund balance. With remote work more common and "new first-tier" cities competing aggressively on talent incentives (hukou/residency subsidies, home-purchase subsidies, rent subsidies), more job seekers now weigh a city's cost of living, hukou difficulty, and access to schooling alongside the raw salary number. Combine a cost-of-living calculator with officially published per-capita disposable income data for each city to compare offers more accurately.

08

Monthly Salary vs Hourly/Piece-Rate Pay: Which Structure Suits You?

Most white-collar roles in China use a "monthly salary plus year-end bonus" structure, while many blue-collar and service-industry roles pay by the hour or by piece rate. Monthly-salaried employees typically receive a stable base wage each month regardless of workload, and — combined with the year-end bonus — see less income volatility, which makes monthly budgeting easier; however, as noted above, whether and how overtime is actually paid still depends on the employer and whether the role falls under standard, no-fixed-hours, or comprehensive working-hours arrangements. Hourly or piece-rate workers — factory-line staff, food-delivery riders, ride-hailing drivers, and other flexibly employed workers — are paid by actual hours or output, which can raise the income ceiling but also increases volatility, and social-insurance coverage often must be self-arranged as a "flexibly employed person" or may not exist at all. Which structure suits you depends on how much you value income stability, full social-insurance coverage, and a defined career path: those prioritizing stability and promotion tracks tend to fit better with monthly-salaried roles, while those who want to trade longer hours or higher output directly for more pay may prefer hourly or piece-rate work.

09

Understanding Pay Frequency in China: Monthly Salary and the Year-End Bonus

Unlike the US, where weekly and biweekly pay are common, the vast majority of Chinese employers pay salary monthly — on a fixed date each month (often the 10th, 15th, or end of month), for 12 payments a year. Many employers also provide "13th-month pay" (an extra month's salary, usually paid as a lump sum before Chinese New Year or at year-end) or a performance-linked year-end bonus that can range from roughly 1 to 6+ months' salary depending on industry, company performance, and seniority — bonuses tend to make up a larger share of total annual pay in tech and finance. This means estimating annual income as simply "monthly salary × 12" can significantly understate actual take-home pay; conversely, when comparing offers, weigh how reliable the bonus is (is it tightly tied to performance, and does it require still being employed on the payout date?). The year-end bonus can be taxed separately or combined with regular income, and the two methods can produce meaningfully different tax bills — it is worth running both scenarios through a tax calculator before accepting an offer or at year-end, and choosing whichever results in lower tax (note: the separate-taxation option for bonuses has been extended by the Ministry of Finance and State Taxation Administration on a rolling basis in the past — check the latest policy before relying on it).

10

Raise Calculator: Planning Salary Increases and Career Progression in China

Understanding typical raise sizes in the Chinese job market helps set realistic expectations and negotiate effectively. Annual across-the-board raises typically run about 3%-8%, depending on company performance, industry conditions, and the broader economy; top performers can receive a larger merit increase. Promotions typically bring a 10%-30% raise, with bigger jumps moving from individual-contributor to management roles. Changing employers averages a 15%-30% raise, with scarce talent in hot sectors (AI, semiconductors, new energy) sometimes seeing larger jumps — but job-hopping too frequently (under 1-2 years per role) can hurt background-check assessments and perceived long-term stability. Year-end bonuses and long-term incentives like stock options or RSUs are also a meaningful part of compensation growth and should not be ignored when only comparing base-salary increases. When negotiating a raise, prepare documentation of your accomplishments and market-rate data (industry salary reports from platforms like Lagou or Liepin), and time the request around annual performance reviews or after delivering a major project. A raise calculator helps project income over several years under different raise scenarios so you can plan a career path that maximizes long-term earnings.