Partner Article
National Minimum Wage increases
As of today, October 1, changes to the National Minimum Wage will take effect. The breakdowns are as follows:
- Aged 21 and over minimum wage rate increases from £6.08 to £6.19 per hour
- The Youth Development Rate (18 - 20 year olds) will remain at £4.98 per hour
- Minimum wage for 16- 17 year olds will remain at £3.68 per hour
- Apprentice pay will increase from £2.60 to £2.65 per hour
Businesses must ensure that they are abiding by the increases as they are law. Those who are of compulsory school age are not entitled to the National Minimum Wage.
Most workers in the UK over school leaving age are legally entitled to be paid at least the National Minimum Wage and all employers have to pay it if the person is entitled to it. It makes no difference:
- if you are paid weekly or monthly, by cheque, in cash or in another way
- if you work full time, part time or any other working pattern
- if you work at your employer’s own premises or elsewhere
- what size your employer is
- where you work in the UK
Everyone is entitled to the National Minimum Wage, even if they sign a contract agreeing to be paid at a lower rate. This is regardless of whether they sign at their own free will or because the employer persuades an individual. The contract will have no legal effect and persons must still be paid the proper rate.
www.westrayrecruitment.co.uk
This was posted in Bdaily's Members' News section by Stephen Farrell .
Enjoy the read? Get Bdaily delivered.
Sign up to receive our daily bulletin, sent to your inbox, for free.
Culture, confidence and creativity in the North East
Putting in the groundwork to boost skills
£100,000 milestone drives forward STEM work
Restoring confidence for the economic road ahead
Ready to scale? Buy-and-build offers opportunity
When will our regional economy grow?
Creating a thriving North East construction sector
Why investors are still backing the North East
Time to stop risking Britain’s family businesses
A year of growth, collaboration and impact
2000 reasons for North East business positivity
How to make your growth strategy deliver in 2026