Salary Basics

Using Multiple Hourly Rates from Different Jobs

Jan 28, 2026
9 min read
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The "Portfolio Career"

More people are working multiple jobs (the "polyworker"). You might earn $25/hour at your day job and $50/hour consulting in the evenings. How do you answer "What is your annual salary?"

The Weighted Average Fallacy

Don't just average $25 and $50 to get $37.50. You exert different effort and hours for each.

The Layer Cake Method

Calculate the annual income for EACH job separately, then stack them like layers of a cake.

Job Source Rate Hours/Year Total Income
Job A (Day Job) $25 2,000 $50,000
Job B (Consulting) $50 200 $10,000
Job C (Weekend) $18 500 $9,000
TOTAL 2,700 $69,000

Your Effective Hourly Rate

Divide Total Income ($69,000) by Total Hours (2,700) = $25.55/hour.

This number tells you what your time is actually worth on average across all your activities.

Tax Brackets Warning

Earning $69,000 puts you in a different tax bracket than $50,000. Ensure you are setting aside enough taxes for Job B and Job C, as they likely don't withhold taxes for you.

Conclusion

Multiple income streams are excellent for security. By calculating each "layer" separately, you get a clear picture of your total financial health.