Employers should use gross pay to determine whether they comply with the NMW legislation. Most financial rewards (including incentives, piecework payments, sales commission and performance-related pay awards) count towards the calculation of pay for entitlement to the NMW.
However, some things, such as non-consolidated regional allowances, unsocial hours payments, on-call allowances, additional premiums for working overtime or shifts, and tips and gratuities do not count. Similarly, benefits in kind - uniforms, meals and travel, for example - are outside the NMW equation, although employer-provided accommodation may be counted.
Expenses paid for an employee to travel to a temporary workplace do not count as part of an employee's pay for NMW.
Certain deductions from wages and payments made to the employer will have to deducted from gross pay to determine NMW (see ‘Deductions from pay that reduce minimum wage pay’) whereas others can be disregarded because they do not reduce NMW pay (see ‘Deductions from pay which do not reduce minimum wage pay’). Once these deductions and payments are considered, the pay for NMW purposes has been calculated.
Once gross pay has been determined, certain deductions from pay will have to be taken into account when calculating hourly pay for the worker. This is because they reduce NMW pay so the worker has to receive at least minimum wage once the deductions have been made. These include:
In Round 17 of National Minimum Wage Naming and Shaming, August 2021, a number of deductions were identified that resulted in a breach of the national minimum wage:
Once gross pay has been determined, certain deductions from pay do not have to be taken into account when calculating hourly pay for the worker. This is because they do not reduce NMW pay so the worker is only entitled to receive at least minimum wage before the deductions are made. These include:
The BEIS Guidance also includes deductions for tax, National Insurance and those which are not connected to employment or for the employer’s use or benefit (e.g. pension contributions).