Pint Purchasing Power Calculator

Pint Purchasing Power Calculator | How Many Pints Can You Afford?
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Pint Purchasing Power Calculator

Find out how many pints your hourly wage can buy, how long you need to work to earn one, and how your purchasing power compares to the national average.

🍺 Pint Price
💷 Hourly Wage
📊 Purchasing Power Index
⏱️ Time Per Pint

Your Details

Enter your hourly wage and local pint price to work out your purchasing power

💷 Your Earnings

Enter your gross hourly wage before tax and deductions.

🍺 Local Pint Price

Enter the average price of a pint of beer or lager where you drink.

Calculation Results

Your pint affordability and purchasing power breakdown

🍺

Enter your wage and pint price above and click Calculate Purchasing Power to see how many pints your money buys.

Purchasing Power Index & What It Means

Your Purchasing Power Index shows how your pints-per-hour figure compares to the national baseline (based on average UK hourly earnings and average pint price). Use the table below to interpret your score.

Index Score Classification Pints / Hour What It Means
Below 70Low Power< 2.5Pints take up a large share of your hourly earnings
70 – 99Below Average2.5 – 3.6Slightly less affordable than the national average
100 – 130Average3.6 – 4.7In line with typical UK affordability
Above 130High Power> 4.7Pints are highly affordable relative to your wage

Pint Purchasing Power FAQ

Everything you need to know about pint affordability, purchasing power, and how the index is calculated.

Pint Purchasing Power measures how many pints of beer an hour of your wage can buy. It is calculated by dividing your hourly wage by the price of a pint. A higher figure means your income stretches further at the bar, while a lower figure means pints take up a larger share of your earnings.

Like the well-known Big Mac Index, a pint of beer is a simple, widely understood product sold almost everywhere. Comparing its price to local wages gives a quick, relatable snapshot of the cost of living and relative affordability between cities, regions, or countries.

The index compares your personal ‘pints per hour worked’ figure against a national average baseline (based on average UK hourly earnings and average pint price). An index of 100 means you match the national average exactly, above 100 means your money buys more pints than average, and below 100 means it buys fewer.

Divide 60 by the number of pints your hourly wage can buy. For example, if your wage buys 3 pints per hour, then 60 ÷ 3 = 20 minutes of work is needed to earn one pint.

Yes. As wages and pint prices both change at different rates, purchasing power shifts year to year. This is sometimes referred to informally as ‘pintflation’ when the price of a pint rises faster than average wages, eroding how many pints a typical hour of work can buy.

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