Dietitian Reduced/Compressed Hours Calculator
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Looking at a 4-day week, 9-day fortnight, term-time only or annualised hours? This calculator shows how your pay would look for a Dietitian under different reduced or compressed patterns compared to full-time. Compare FTE and annual pay so you can weigh up options.
Assumptions and pay data
Pay data: NHS Agenda for Change. AfC pay points per NHS Employers 2026/27 (from 1 April 2026). Allowances: HCAS minima for inner/outer/fringe (England, Apr 2026); actual HCAS is % of basic between min and max. Consultant/GP figures are for comparison only. Registrars may be on the junior doctor contract.
- Figures are illustrative. We pro-rate full-time band pay by FTE (e.g. 0.8 for 4-day week, 0.9 for 9-day fortnight). Term-time and annualised hours use the same dataset; employer rules may differ.
- All amounts are gross. Tax, NI and pension are not deducted.
Guide for Dietitian
This guide explains reduced and compressed working patterns for Dietitian on Band 5 at NHS. Not every employer offers every pattern; use this for pay impact, then confirm eligibility with HR.
Reduced hours for Dietitian
This page models named patterns (four-day week, nine-day fortnight, term-time only, annualised hours) for Dietitian on Band 5 at NHS. Pay is pro-rated from full-time NHS Agenda for Change basic pay unless your contract uses a different formula.
Reduced and compressed hours
A four-day week is typically 0.8 FTE. A nine-day fortnight is 0.9 FTE (nine working days in ten). Term-time-only staff are paid for weeks worked per year. Annualised hours contracts spread agreed hours across the year rather than fixed weekly patterns.
Employer variation
Not every employer offers every pattern. Some use a 0.89 FTE term-time formula for support staff. The calculator uses straightforward pro-rata from full-time band pay; your payroll may differ.
Example scenario
Illustrative example at bottom of band (matches calculator defaults)
| Band / grade | Band 5 |
|---|---|
| Full-time gross (example) | £32,073 |
| At 0.8 FTE (example) | £25,658 |
| Annual difference vs full-time | £6,415 |
Reduced/Compressed Hours Calculator
You'll see:
- Full-time pay vs your chosen pattern (e.g. 4-day week, term-time)
- Pro-rated annual pay and the difference
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Frequently asked questions
What patterns can Dietitian compare here?
Four-day week (0.8 FTE), nine-day fortnight (0.9), term-time only, annualised hours, or a custom FTE. Pay is pro-rated from full-time Band 5 pay in NHS Agenda for Change.
How does term-time pay work for Dietitian at NHS?
You enter weeks worked per year (for example 39). We pro-rate annual full-time pay to that share of the year. Schools and councils sometimes use different formulas; check your contract.
Is this different from the part-time calculator?
The part-time tool uses a simple FTE slider. This one models named patterns that NHS staff often request, which helps when discussing reduced hours with HR.
Will NHS offer every pattern?
Eligibility varies. Some roles must maintain cover; others have term-time-only contracts by default. Use this for pay impact; HR confirms availability.
What about pension and leave on compressed hours?
Pensionable pay and leave are usually based on contracted hours. After choosing a pattern here, use the Annual Leave and Take-Home calculators with the same hours.
Are the results gross or net? Do you store my data?
Unless this page says otherwise, figures are gross (before tax, National Insurance and pension). We do not store inputs or results; everything runs in your browser.
Are these figures official for Dietitian?
No. All outputs are illustrative planning aids. Always check NHS, your union, regulator or official published terms for definitive amounts and rules.
About this role
What is a Dietitian?
A Dietitian is an HCPC-registered professional who advises on diet and nutrition for health and disease. They work in hospitals, community and public health. Most NHS dietitians are on AFC Band 5–7.
Typical demands, progression and balance
Dietetics offers variety and patient impact. Pay and satisfaction depend on setting and band. Progression to Band 7 (specialist/lead) or education is common.
What about 4-day weeks or compressed hours?
Many employers support 4-day weeks, 9-day fortnights, term-time only or annualised hours. Use the calculator above to compare full-time pay with your chosen pattern for your band.
Disclaimer
This calculator provides illustrative estimates only and is not financial or career advice. Pay rules and allowances can change. Always check your employer or official sources for definitive figures.