...
💰 Free Pay Calculator

12 Hour Shift Pay Calculator

Instantly calculate your daily, weekly, monthly, and annual earnings for 12-hour shifts — including overtime pay, night differentials, weekend premiums, and tax estimates. Built for nurses, healthcare workers, factory workers, security staff, and every shift worker who deserves to know exactly what their hard hours are worth.

12 Hour Shift Pay Calculator

Base pay + overtime + night diff + weekend premium — full picture

Your Hourly Rate & Hours
$
Your regular straight-time rate
Hours before OT kicks in (usually 8)
Full shift including any OT hours
Typical 12hr schedule: 3–4 days
Deducted from paid hours
Daily Pay
Per 12-hr shift
Weekly Pay
Monthly Pay
× 4.33 weeks
Annual Pay
× 52 weeks
Pay Breakdown Per Shift
Regular Pay
Overtime Pay
Base Rate & Shift Details
$
Hours beyond regular threshold
Differential & Premium Pay
%
% premium on night hours (e.g. 10%)
Hours qualifying for night diff
%
% premium for Sat/Sun shifts
Gross Daily Pay
All premiums included
Weekly Gross
Monthly Gross
Approx.
Annual Gross
52 weeks
Daily Pay Components
Regular Base
Overtime
Night Diff
Weekend Premium
📋 Full Breakdown
Common 12-Hour Shift Patterns
$
Deduct unpaid break from 12
Avg Weekly Pay
Monthly Pay
× 4.33
Annual Pay
52 weeks
Avg Shifts/Week
Per pattern
📅 Schedule Info
Job Offer A
$
%
Job Offer B
$
%
Offer A — Weekly
Offer B — Weekly
Better Offer
Annual Diff
More per year
📊 Comparison
Formula
Daily Pay= Reg Hrs × Rate+ OT Hrs × Rate × OT Mult+ Differentials
Disclaimer: Results are estimates based on inputs provided. Actual pay may vary due to employer-specific overtime rules, union agreements, local labor laws, tax deductions, benefit contributions, and other factors. This calculator does not constitute legal, payroll, or financial advice. Always verify your pay with your employer’s payroll documentation.
Shift Work Pay Guide

What Is a 12 Hour Shift Pay Calculator — and Why Shift Workers Need One

Working a 12-hour shift is grueling. You put in long hours, often through nights and weekends, in some of the most demanding roles that modern economies depend on — nursing, emergency services, factory operations, security, oil and gas, logistics, and more. The very least you deserve is to know exactly what those hours are worth. That’s what our 12 Hour Shift Pay Calculator is built for.

Unlike a simple hourly wage multiplier, this calculator accounts for the full complexity of 12-hour shift compensation: overtime rates that kick in after 8 hours (or sometimes after 40 hours per week, depending on your state or country), night differential premiums for working unsociable hours, weekend uplift rates, and the break deductions that affect your paid hours per shift. Together, these variables can push your actual earnings 15–35% above your base hourly rate — and knowing the true total is essential for budgeting, comparing job offers, and ensuring your paycheck is correct every pay period.

💡 Most 12-hour shift workers are paid for 11 to 11.5 hours per shift after a 30–60 minute unpaid break is deducted. Always use your actual paid hours — not clock hours — when calculating shift pay.

Our calculator goes beyond what competitors offer. It has four modes: a quick Basic Pay calculator, a full Advanced mode with night differentials and weekend premiums, a Shift Schedule mode for common 12-hour rotation patterns (3-4-4-3, Pitman, Panama, and more), and a Job Offer Comparison mode so you can evaluate two positions side by side before making a career move. All results show daily, weekly, monthly, and annual pay — giving you the complete financial picture of your shift work.


Understanding the Math

How to Calculate 12 Hour Shift Pay — Step-by-Step

Understanding how your pay is calculated gives you the power to verify every paycheck and catch errors before they cost you money. Here is a complete walkthrough of the calculation logic behind 12-hour shift pay:

  1. Determine Your Paid Hours Per ShiftStart with your total shift length (typically 12 hours) and subtract any unpaid break time. A 30-minute unpaid break gives you 11.5 paid hours. This is your actual billable time and the basis for all pay calculations.
  2. Split Regular vs. Overtime HoursMost overtime rules trigger after 8 hours in a single workday. So in an 11.5-hour paid shift, you have 8 regular hours and 3.5 overtime hours. Some jurisdictions calculate OT weekly (after 40 hours) rather than daily — know which rule applies to you.
  3. Calculate Regular PayMultiply your regular hours by your hourly base rate. For 8 hours at $25/hr: Regular Pay = $200.00.
  4. Calculate Overtime PayMultiply your overtime hours by your rate and the OT multiplier. For 3.5 OT hours at $25/hr × 1.5 = $131.25. Your total pre-differential daily pay = $331.25.
  5. Add Night Differential (if applicable)If your shift falls during night hours, multiply the night-shift hours by your base rate and the differential percentage. Example: 6 night hours × $25/hr × 10% = $15.00 additional.
  6. Add Weekend Premium (if applicable)If working Saturday or Sunday, multiply your total paid hours by your rate and the weekend premium percentage. Example: 11.5 hrs × $25/hr × 15% = $43.13 additional.
  7. Multiply by Shifts Per Week for Weekly, Monthly, AnnualDaily gross × shifts per week = weekly gross. Weekly × 4.33 = monthly. Weekly × 52 = annual. These are your gross figures before tax deductions.

Worked Example: A nurse works 3 shifts per week at $32/hr with 30-min unpaid break, 3.5 OT hours per shift at 1.5×, and 10% night differential on 6 hours. Daily gross = (8 × $32) + (3.5 × $32 × 1.5) + (6 × $32 × 0.10) = $256 + $168 + $19.20 = $443.20/shift. Weekly = $443.20 × 3 = $1,329.60. Annual = $1,329.60 × 52 = $69,139. Enter these same numbers above to verify instantly.


Overtime Rules Explained

Overtime Rates & Legal Rules for 12 Hour Shifts — What You Must Know

Overtime law is one of the most frequently misunderstood areas of employment compensation, and 12-hour shift workers are particularly affected. Here is a clear breakdown of how overtime works in common jurisdictions and what it means for your pay:

JurisdictionOT TriggerOT RateDouble Time TriggerNotes
United States (Federal FLSA)Over 40 hrs/week1.5× base rateN/A (federal)Many states add daily OT rules on top
California (CA Labor Code)Over 8 hrs/day OR 40 hrs/week1.5× base rate2× after 12 hrs/day or 7th consecutive dayStrongest daily OT protection in the US
United KingdomNo statutory OT payEmployer discretionN/AContract must not average below national minimum wage
Canada (most provinces)Over 8 hrs/day or 44 hrs/week1.5× base rateVaries by provinceBC, Alberta, Ontario have specific OT rules
AustraliaOver 38 hrs/week (ordinary hours)1.5×, then 2×2× after 2–3 OT hours (Award-dependent)Modern Award system governs most workers
IndiaOver 9 hrs/day or 48 hrs/week2× base rateN/AFactories Act 1948 mandates double time OT
UAEOver 8 hrs/day or 48 hrs/week1.25× base rate1.5× for work between 9pm–4amPrivate sector under Labour Law

The critical insight for 12-hour shift workers: in California and several other US states, every 12-hour shift automatically generates 4 hours of overtime pay (the first 4 hours beyond the daily 8-hour threshold at 1.5×). This is why a California nurse earning $40/hr doesn’t earn $480 per 12-hour shift — they earn $40 × 8 + $60 × 4 = $560 per shift. That’s a 16.7% premium just from daily OT law. Always know which overtime rule governs your employment — it can add thousands of dollars to your annual earnings.


Shift Patterns Explained

Common 12-Hour Shift Patterns and What They Pay

One of the unique complexities of 12-hour shift work is that you rarely work the same number of days every week. Most 12-hour schedules use rotating patterns that average out over 2–4 week cycles. Understanding your pattern is essential for correctly projecting monthly and annual income:

Pattern NameHow It WorksAvg Days/WeekAnnual ShiftsBest For
3-4-4-3 Rotation3 on, 3 off, 4 on, 4 off, 4 on, 3 off, 3 on, 4 off3.5 days~182Healthcare, nursing, hospitals
Fixed 3 Days/Week3 consistent shifts per week, same days3.0 days~156Part-time professionals, second jobs
Fixed 4 Days/Week4 shifts per week, same schedule4.0 days~208Full-time intensive schedules
Pitman (2-2-3)2 on, 2 off, 3 on, 2 off, 2 on, 3 off repeating3.5 days~182Manufacturing, police, fire services
Panama Schedule2 on, 2 off, 3 on, 2 on, 2 off, 3 off cycle3.5 days~182Oil & gas, utilities, continuous ops
DuPont Schedule4 on, 4 off, 4 on, 4 off, 4 on, 8 off (28-day cycle)3.86 days~200Chemical plants, 24/7 manufacturing
Continental / 4-on 4-off4 consecutive days on, 4 consecutive off3.5 days~182Security, retail, logistics

The practical implication: a nurse on a 3-4-4-3 rotation who calculates their monthly pay as 3.5 × 4 = 14 shifts will sometimes get a month with 13 shifts and sometimes 15. For accurate budgeting, use the annual figure (hourly rate × annual paid hours) rather than multiplying a weekly average. Our Schedule calculator tab above handles these variations automatically for the most common patterns.


Night & Weekend Premiums

Shift Differentials: Night Pay, Weekend Premiums, and Holiday Pay Explained

Shift differentials are extra payments made to workers who work outside standard daytime Monday-Friday hours. For 12-hour shift workers, these can add significantly to base earnings — sometimes 10–30% more per shift. Understanding each type is key to accurately projecting your income:

🌙

Night Differential

An extra percentage (typically 10–15% in healthcare, 5–10% in manufacturing) paid for hours worked during designated night hours — commonly 7pm to 7am or 11pm to 7am. Applied only to the qualifying hours in a shift, not the total shift length.

📅

Weekend Premium

Extra pay (typically 5–25%) for shifts starting or worked entirely on Saturdays or Sundays. Some employers pay this on all weekend hours; others only on the full shift. Common in hospitals, retail, and customer service operations.

🎉

Holiday Pay

Federal and public holidays typically attract a premium of 1.5× to 2× the regular rate, plus sometimes an extra day off in lieu. For shift workers already earning OT, some employers stack holiday pay on top — check your specific employment contract.

⚠️

Hazard / Risk Pay

Workers in high-risk environments (offshore, chemical plants, emergency medicine) may receive hazard pay as a flat dollar add-on per shift or as a percentage of base rate. This is usually negotiated contractually rather than being legally mandated.

🏥

On-Call Premium

Healthcare workers who are “on-call” after their shift or between shifts may be paid a reduced on-call rate (often $3–$8/hr) for their availability, plus the full shift rate if called in. This compounds annual earnings significantly for frequently on-call staff.

📈

Charge Nurse / Lead Differential

Supervisory roles within a shift (charge nurses, team leads, senior operators) often attract a flat dollar increment — typically $1–$4/hr — applied to all hours worked in that role. Calculated separately from the base rate.


Industry Context

12-Hour Shift Pay by Industry — What Are Workers Actually Earning?

Knowing your pay is meaningful only when compared against what others in your field earn. Here is a realistic reference of typical 12-hour shift gross earnings across major industries in the United States for 2026, based on the most common 3-shift-per-week schedules with standard OT:

Industry / RoleTypical Hourly RateOT/Night DiffEst. Daily PayEst. Annual (3×/wk)
Registered Nurse (Hospital)$35–$55/hrYes (1.5× + 10–15% night)$470–$780$73,000–$121,000
LPN / LVN (Hospital)$22–$35/hrYes (1.5× OT)$295–$480$46,000–$74,000
ER / ICU Nurse (Specialized)$45–$75/hrYes + specialty diff$600–$1,050$93,000–$163,000
Manufacturing Operator$18–$30/hrSometimes (varies by plant)$240–$415$37,000–$64,000
Security Officer$15–$25/hrSometimes$195–$340$30,000–$53,000
Oil & Gas / Offshore Worker$28–$60/hrYes + hazard pay$380–$850$59,000–$132,000
Emergency Medical Technician$18–$28/hrSome OT (24-hr shifts vary)$240–$385$37,000–$60,000
Police Officer (Patrol)$25–$45/hrYes (1.5× + OT common)$340–$630$53,000–$98,000
Correctional Officer$20–$35/hrYes (frequent mandatory OT)$267–$490$41,000–$76,000
CNA / Healthcare Aide$16–$22/hrSometimes$210–$300$33,000–$46,000

These are gross pre-tax estimates for standard 3-shift-per-week schedules. Actual net take-home varies significantly by state/local tax rates, health insurance premium deductions, retirement contributions (401k, pension), union dues, and any other voluntary or mandatory payroll deductions. Use our calculator above with your specific inputs for the most accurate personal projection.


Smart Financial Planning

How to Budget and Plan Finances as a 12-Hour Shift Worker

One of the underrated challenges of 12-hour shift work is the irregular weekly income pattern. You might earn significantly more in a 4-shift week than a 3-shift week, and rotating schedules mean your monthly paycheck varies. Here’s how experienced shift workers approach financial planning to build stability from a variable income:

Budget Based on Annual Income, Not Weekly. Because shift rotations cause weekly earnings to fluctuate by hundreds of dollars, budgeting on a weekly basis leads to constant recalculation. Instead, calculate your annual gross from our calculator, subtract estimated taxes (typically 22–28% combined federal and state for most healthcare workers in the US), and divide by 12 for a reliable monthly budget baseline.

Build a 1-Month Income Buffer. Shift workers face higher risk from unexpected sick days, facility closures, and schedule changes. Keeping one full month of net income in savings acts as an income stabilizer that eliminates financial stress from lighter pay periods.

Tax Tip for Shift Workers: Night differentials, overtime premiums, and weekend pay are all fully taxable at your marginal rate. However, if your employer requires you to purchase specific work clothing, footwear, or tools not reimbursed by your employer, these can be deductible under certain conditions. Shift workers in healthcare sometimes have access to pre-tax flexible spending accounts (FSA) for healthcare expenses — a valuable tax reduction strategy.

Maximize Retirement Contributions Early. Shift workers in physically demanding roles often have shorter career horizons due to the physical toll of long hours and night shifts. Contributing the maximum to a 401(k) or Roth IRA from the start of your career is especially important. The overtime pay that rounds out your annual income is an excellent source of retirement contributions — treat it as “bonus money” rather than regular income, and invest the surplus.

Track Overtime Separately. Your base salary builds your financial baseline. Overtime, differentials, and premiums are the variable income layer. Sustainable household budgets are funded by base pay; savings, debt paydown, and investment goals are funded by the variable layer. This mental accounting framework prevents lifestyle inflation when OT is heavy and financial stress when OT is light.


Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions About 12 Hour Shift Pay

How many hours are you actually paid for in a 12-hour shift?
Most 12-hour shifts include one 30-minute unpaid meal break, meaning you are typically paid for 11.5 hours. Some facilities use a 60-minute unpaid break (paid for 11 hours) or use auto-deduct systems that remove break time from total hours. Always check your payroll policy — if your break is sometimes interrupted by work demands, you may be entitled to pay for that time under FLSA rules in the US.
Does overtime kick in after 8 hours or after 40 hours for 12-hour shifts?
It depends on your location and employer. Under US Federal law (FLSA), overtime is calculated weekly — you must work more than 40 hours in a week to earn 1.5× pay. However, California and several other states impose daily overtime — any time worked beyond 8 hours in a single day qualifies for 1.5×, and beyond 12 hours in a day qualifies for 2×. If you’re in a daily-OT state like California, every 12-hour shift automatically generates OT pay. Check your state’s labor department website to confirm your rule.
Is night shift differential pay taxable?
Yes. Night differential, weekend premium, overtime pay, and all other shift premiums are fully taxable as ordinary income. They are included in your W-2 gross wages and taxed at your marginal federal and state income tax rates. There is no special tax break for shift work premiums in the US. However, the additional income may put you into a higher tax bracket, so consider increasing your 401(k) withholding in heavy OT periods to reduce taxable income.
How much is $25/hr worth working three 12-hour shifts per week?
At $25/hr working 3 × 11.5 paid hours per week with standard 8-hour daily OT threshold: regular pay = 3 × 8 × $25 = $600/week. OT pay = 3 × 3.5 × $25 × 1.5 = $393.75/week. Weekly gross = $993.75. Monthly = ~$4,302. Annual = ~$51,675. Enter $25 and your specific details into our Basic Pay calculator above for the precise figure with your break time and OT rule.
What is the best 12-hour shift schedule for work-life balance?
The 3-4-4-3 rotation (also called the “Baylor Plan” in healthcare) is widely regarded as the most balanced 12-hour schedule. It averages 3.5 shifts per week, gives workers frequent blocks of consecutive days off (3–4 days), and makes it easier to maintain a consistent sleep schedule compared to rotating day/night schedules. The Pitman 2-2-3 schedule is favored in industries where alternating day/night teams are needed. The “right” schedule also depends on whether you’re a day-shift or night-shift person, which has significant health implications over a long career.
Can my employer require me to work more than 12 hours without extra pay?
In most US states, employers can legally require mandatory overtime (“mandatory OT” or “MOT”) unless your union contract prohibits it. However, all hours worked — including those beyond the scheduled 12 — must be paid at the applicable rate. In daily-OT states like California, hours beyond 12 in a day are paid at 2×. If asked to stay beyond your scheduled shift, keep records of all actual hours worked and compare against your paycheck — unpaid overtime is wage theft and is legally actionable.

Important Disclaimer: All calculator results are estimates only. Actual pay depends on your specific employment contract, collective bargaining agreement, applicable state and federal labor laws, employer payroll policies, tax withholding rates, and other factors. This tool does not provide legal, tax, or financial advice. Always verify your pay with your employer’s payroll department and consult a qualified professional for personal financial planning. Overtime rules, minimum wage rates, and tax brackets change regularly — confirm current regulations with your local labor authority.

Scroll to Top
Seraphinite AcceleratorOptimized by Seraphinite Accelerator
Turns on site high speed to be attractive for people and search engines.