About UK Calculator Hub
UK Calculator Hub is designed to make everyday money questions easier to understand with modern, UK-focused tools and clear visual results.
The aim is to build useful calculators that feel simple, trustworthy, and fast to use on both desktop and mobile. The first version focuses on salary, pension, rent affordability, mortgage affordability, hourly pay, and cost of living.
Version 1 keeps things lightweight on purpose: no accounts, no database, and no paid APIs. Calculations are handled with local TypeScript logic so the site stays fast, affordable to run, and easy to improve over time.
If you spot an issue or want a new calculator added, the contact page is the best place to get in touch.
If you want to see how the site approaches updates, source links, assumptions and calculator limitations, read the editorial policy.

Chamara S. Kodikara
Founder of UK Calculator Hub
Intermediate Electrical Design Engineer in UK building services
UK Calculator Hub is built and maintained by Chamara S. Kodikara, a UK-based engineer with a systems-focused background in building services and practical problem solving. His work across the UK, Sri Lanka and the Maldives has centred on turning complex rules, constraints and calculations into clear, usable outputs, which is the same mindset behind UKCalcHub. The site is designed to make everyday UK money questions easier to understand with transparent assumptions, official source links and straightforward visual explanations. It is not presented as regulated financial advice, but as a practical planning tool built with care by someone who values clarity, structure and honest communication.
Who built the site?
Chamara S. Kodikara built UK Calculator Hub after seeing how often practical money questions are answered either with dense spreadsheets or with old-looking tools that feel harder to trust on mobile. His background is in engineering rather than regulated financial advice, so the goal is not to present the site as an authority figure with hidden formulas. The goal is to give people a cleaner, more inspectable way to think through salary, rent, mortgage, pension and cost-of-living questions.
That is why the site leans on current UK tax-year references, plain-English explanations, official source links and clear disclaimers. The tools are meant to help people plan better and ask better questions, not to replace an accountant, mortgage adviser or financial planner.