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You seem to me a salaried employed thats why i said that your employer can only confirm your employment contract. Many people are in slaried employment i.e they work fixed number of hours each month/week but have overtime and bonuses on top of it thats why their income may also vary each months. Calculation formula for bonuses/overtime/commission is same as that of non salaried yes 12 feb to 12 august is fine.adnan1991 wrote:Thanks for the detailed reply ILR1980
I'm Definitely in salaried employment and get paid weekly. When sending my payslips and calculating pay, must I send the payslips from the first of the month or would mid month work?
I ask as I calculated my 6 months pay from the 12 February (this is when I started earning the higher amount of £10.53 an hour). I've put my pay below to show what I mean.
12-Feb £387.00
19-Feb £387.00
26-Feb £387.00
04-Mar £387.00
11-Mar £387.00
18-Mar £387.00
25-Mar £309.00
01-Apr £442.00
08-Apr £387.00
15-Apr £387.00
22-Apr £387.00
29-Apr £394.88
06-May £393.00
13-May £394.88
20-May £393.23
27-May £387.18
03-Jun £314.77
10-Jun £394.88
17-Jun £394.88
24-Jun £394.88
01-Jul £394.88
08-Jul £393.92
15-Jul £394.88
22-Jul £394.88
29-Jul £394.88
05-Aug £394.88
12-Aug £394.88
Adnan are these net or gross? It's not as simple as taking them and adding them all up then dividing by 12 under salaried employment sadly. They'll take the lowest gross payslip and calculate using thatadnan1991 wrote:Thanks for the detailed reply ILR1980
I'm Definitely in salaried employment and get paid weekly. When sending my payslips and calculating pay, must I send the payslips from the first of the month or would mid month work?
I ask as I calculated my 6 months pay from the 12 February (this is when I started earning the higher amount of £10.53 an hour). I've put my pay below to show what I mean.
12-Feb £387.00
19-Feb £387.00
26-Feb £387.00
04-Mar £387.00
11-Mar £387.00
18-Mar £387.00
25-Mar £309.00
01-Apr £442.00
08-Apr £387.00
15-Apr £387.00
22-Apr £387.00
29-Apr £394.88
06-May £393.00
13-May £394.88
20-May £393.23
27-May £387.18
03-Jun £314.77
10-Jun £394.88
17-Jun £394.88
24-Jun £394.88
01-Jul £394.88
08-Jul £393.92
15-Jul £394.88
22-Jul £394.88
29-Jul £394.88
05-Aug £394.88
12-Aug £394.88
If he is paid a fixed hourly rate and works 37.5 hrs per week, dips are because he isn't paid for holidays then I believe this would fall under salaried employment, no?Obie wrote:It is not salaried employment . It is variable non salaried. The figure over 26 weeks is looked at and not just the lowest as in Salaried employment, which is usually monthly in nature.
Hourly rate don't necessarily mean non salaried when you have to work fixed number of hours per weeks/month ( 37.5 hour ) in his case..Obie wrote:It is not salaried employment . It is variable non salaried. The figure over 26 weeks is looked at and not just the lowest as in Salaried employment, which is usually monthly in nature.
Even if i am right or you are right, the bottom line is that the calculation is the same, the sum of earning over 26 weeks, divided by 6 and multiply by 12. So whether it is salaried or not, makes no difference to the method of calculation.[b]5.1.3. Non-salaried employment[/b] wrote: includes that paid at an hourly or other rate (and the number
and/or pattern of hours required to be worked may vary) or paid an amount which varies
according to the work undertaken. Salaried employment includes that paid at a minimum
fixed rate (usually annual) which is usually subject to a contractual minimum number of
hours to be worked.
Yes if his contract say that he need to work 37.5 hours per week then he is salaried employment even if he get paid hourly . Its better for him to confirm this from HR department. Also financial requirement guideline and calculation of gross annual salary in CAT A is based on monthly income so have no clue whether they will take 4 weeks as one month in order to calculate lowest monthly income in case of salaried employmentrukhsarmanzoor wrote:If he is paid a fixed hourly rate and works 37.5 hrs per week, dips are because he isn't paid for holidays then I believe this would fall under salaried employment, no?Obie wrote:It is not salaried employment . It is variable non salaried. The figure over 26 weeks is looked at and not just the lowest as in Salaried employment, which is usually monthly in nature.
Calculation of gross annual salary is different for salaried and non salaried under CAT AObie wrote:I don't actually concur. But I don't believe our point of contention is material to which category OP falls into, which is category A, and how his gross annual earnings is calculated. Our argument on whether or not he is a salaried worker will have no effect on this.
Even if i am right or you are right, the bottom line is that the calculation is the same, the sum of earning over 26 weeks, divided by 6 and multiply by 12. So whether it is salaried or not, makes no difference to the method of calculation.[b]5.1.3. Non-salaried employment[/b] wrote: includes that paid at an hourly or other rate (and the number
and/or pattern of hours required to be worked may vary) or paid an amount which varies
according to the work undertaken. Salaried employment includes that paid at a minimum
fixed rate (usually annual) which is usually subject to a contractual minimum number of
hours to be worked.
You may be right. I don't know about his work contract that's why I cannot comment on whether he is in salaried or non salaried employment and that's why I asked him to confirm from his employer but if someone have contract which say that you will be paid hourly and has to work some fixed hours at each week or month then that's definitely salaried employment. If someone getting hourly rate but has zero hour contract then he is non salaried as number of hours will vary each week/monthObie wrote:For salaried. People on salary are not paid by hour, by rather mostly per month, and their pay does not depend on the hour they work. People on hourly rate usually get wages.
UKVI proceed on the basis that people who get paid weekly are non-salaried worker, and that is how there earnings are calculated.
They are not paid on a monthly basis, so you cannot look at a single month.
OP never said he is on a contract. He said he work 37 hours a week, on a temporary job, and gets £10.50 an hour.
He said he works 37 hours are week. That may be the company's policy, but because he works 37 hours don't make him a salaried worker.
There is absolutely no doubt in my mind that OP is a non-Salaried worker.
that's wrong. I was in salaried employment with local council and they gave me pre-written contract which mentioned fixed number of hours to work each month , hourly rate , annual gross income etc . Salaried employee can also work overtime on top of fixed hours/fixed basic pay because of which their pay may vary each month . Also many salaried employed can also get promotion because of which pay could varyKiwelshi wrote: salaried workers don't have an hourly wage.