Skip to main content
Mayor of London logo London Assembly logo
Home

Mayor announces landmark London Living Wage rise to £10.20 an hour

Created on
06 November 2017
  • More than 1,500 London businesses to pay all employees more than £10 an hour for first time
  • Number of London businesses paying the wage has increased by 50 per cent since Sadiq became Mayor
  • BAME communities suffer worst from pay gap

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, today announced a landmark increase in the London Living Wage, from £9.75 to £10.20 per hour – a 4.6 per cent rise and the first time the wage has been more than £10.

He also revealed that another 470 employers signed up to pay their staff the capital’s hourly rate over the last 12 months, bringing the total number of accredited businesses in London to 1,502. As a result, London now accounts for almost 42 per cent of businesses paying the Living Wage in the United Kingdom.

During Sadiq Khan’s mayoralty, the number of businesses paying the London Living Wage has increased by 50 per cent. Over the last year major companies and organisations including Lush, the National Gallery, Somerset House, the Southbank Centre, UBS and Societe Generale have become accredited as London Living Wage employers.

However, the Mayor is calling for more businesses to sign up to pay the London Living Wage to help tackle in-work poverty and the ethnic pay gap in London.

Nearly 60 per cent of Londoners living in poverty are in working households, compared to less than a third of Londoners twenty years ago.

The ethnic pay gap remains unacceptably high, with the median wage for white groups £16.23 per hour, compared to £13.46 per hour for all black, Asian, and minority ethnic (BAME) groups. Moreover, double the number of Bangladeshi and Pakistani workers are paid less than the London Living Wage compared to White British employees.

Next year the Mayor will be launching his Good Work Standard which, with fair pay and the London Living Wage at its heart, will support employers to adopt best practice and achieve high standards in areas of such as workplace diversity, flexible working, health and well-being, skills development and ensuring employees’ voices are heard.

He will work with major employers from all sectors, especially those with high standards, to support businesses and other employers who would like to develop them.

The Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, said: “I pledged to ensure the London Living Wage rises to beyond £10 and I am delighted that has been achieved. I am determined to make London a fairer and more equal city, and the news that more 1,500 businesses are paying the wage is a good step towards achieving that. But we need to go further – and for many more businesses and organisations to sign up.

“London is one of the most dynamic and prosperous economies in the world, but unfortunately this prosperity isn’t shared by all Londoners. In the capital today, more than two million people are struggling to make ends meet and the ethnic pay gap is shockingly and unacceptably large.

“I want to make sure that no one who goes to work every day should have to endure the indignity of poverty.

“Paying the London Living Wage is not only the action of a responsible organisation, but a successful one too. Many of the accredited employers I speak to tell me of the increased productivity and reduced staff turnover that they’ve experienced since signing up.

“The London Living Wage is a campaign which I am thrilled to be a part of and I wholeheartedly encourage more businesses across our great city to get involved.”

The Living Wage Foundation is responsible for calculating the wage rate through the Living Wage Commission. The calculation, based on a basket of goods used to measure the cost of a decent standard of living, gives the wage rate needed for a worker in London to provide their families with the essentials of life plus a cushion against unforeseen events.

Director of the Living Wage Foundation, Katherine Chapman, said: “The new Living Wage rates announced today will bring relief for thousands of UK workers being squeezed by stagnant wages and rising inflation. It’s thanks to the leadership of over 3600 employers across the UK who are committed to paying all their staff, including cleaners and security staff, a real Living Wage.

“In-work poverty is today’s story. New figures out yesterday show that 5.5 million people are still paid less than the real Living Wage – it’s fantastic that this year alone over a thousand more employers have chosen to go beyond the legal minimum and pay a real Living Wage, putting fairness and respect at the heart of their business.

“Great businesses know that, even during these tough times, not only is fair pay the right thing to do but paying the real Living Wage brings big benefits. Nine out of ten accredited Living Wage employers report real benefits including improved retention, reputation, recruitment and staff motivation.”

During his first year as Mayor, Sadiq insisted that all Greater London Authority staff and subcontractors must be paid the London Living Wage.

He is also working with local authorities and encouraging them to follow the lead of Brent, Ealing and Greenwich to offer business rate relief schemes for accredited businesses.

Responding to the London Living Wage increase, Megan Dobney, from the Trades Union Congress London region said: “The increase in the London Living Wage will be welcomed by the tens of thousands of workers who benefit from it. Far too many families in London are living in poverty because of the enduring curse of low paid work.

“If London is truly to be a world class city then it must be a world class place for all who work here, and that means fair pay for all workers.

“We support Sadiq Khan’s promise to ‘tackle low pay and to make London the best place in the world to work’. The London Living Wage is a growing success and our challenge is to get more employers to understand the benefits it brings to their businesses.”

Notes to editors

  • The London Living Wage has risen by 4.6 per cent from £9.75 to £10.20.

     
  • There are now 1,503 London employers accredited, up from 1,033 the previous year. This compares with just 27 employers who publicly backed the Living Wage in 2008.

     
  • Over the past year there have been new living wage employers from every sector including private sector companies in high street banking, retail and energy providers.

     
  • The Living Wage Foundation supports both the London and National Living Wage campaigns by providing ‘accreditation’ to those Living Wage employers who want it.

     
  • The accreditation process is administered by the Foundation, which is part of Citizens UK. ‘Accreditation’ entitles an employer to use the Living Wage mark. In addition accredited employers undertake to meet announced rises in the Living Wage within six months.

     
  • Ethnic pay statistics are from London’s Poverty Profile 2017 https://www.trustforlondon.org.uk/publications/londons-poverty-profile-2017/

     
  • Sadiq announced the new rate for the London Living Wage at the offices of Lush Cosmetics, who have paid the London Living Wage to staff since 2011 and have this year become a fully accredited employer across the whole of the UK. Lush Cosmetics launched in 1995 and since then has grown to be a leading international brand, employing 640 people in London alone. Their starting wage is the London Living Wage.

Need a document on this page in an accessible format?

If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of a PDF or other document on this page in a more accessible format, please get in touch via our online form and tell us which format you need.

It will also help us if you tell us which assistive technology you use. We’ll consider your request and get back to you in 5 working days.