Warwick District Council
2024 to 2025
Gender pay gap report
Contents
1. Overview
2. Main gender pay gap figures
In this organisation:
- women earned 92p for every £1 that men earned (comparing median hourly pay)
- women made up 42.5% of employees in the highest paid quarter, and 73.2% of employees in the lowest paid quarter
- 10.0% of women received bonus pay, compared with 8.3% of men
- women’s bonus pay was 0.0% lower than men’s (comparing median bonus pay)
3. Hourly pay
In this organisation:
-
women’s median hourly pay was 7.6% lower than men’s – this means they earned 92p for every £1 that men earn when comparing median hourly pay
- women’s mean (average) hourly pay was 11.7% lower than men’s
Read more about median and mean
The median gender pay gap figure
This is the difference between the median hourly pay for men and the median hourly pay for women. The median figure is the hourly pay of the man or woman in the middle of a list, ordered from highest to lowest paid.
If there is an even number of men or women, the median is the mean average of the 2 employees in the middle.
Medians are useful to indicate the ‘typical’ situation. They are not distorted by very high or low hourly values. But they may make some gender pay gap issues harder to identify – for example, if the issues are most among the lowest paid or highest paid employees.
The mean (average) gender pay gap figure
To work out their mean gender pay gap, employers add together the hourly pay of all their male employees and divide that figure by the number of men. They repeat this for women.
Mean averages are useful because they place the same value on every number they use, giving a good overall indication of the gender pay gap. But very high or low hourly pay can ‘dominate’ and distort the figure.
4. Pay quarters
In this organisation, women made up:
- 42.5% of employees in the upper pay quarter (highest paid jobs)
- 64.6% of employees in the upper middle pay quarter
- 48.8% of employees in the lower middle pay quarter
- 73.2% of employees in the lower pay quarter (lowest paid jobs)
Table: pay quarters
| Pay quarter | Women (%) | Men (%) | Total (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Upper hourly pay quarter (highest paid) | Percentage in this pay quarter | 42.5 | 57.5 | 100 |
| Percentage of all employees | 10.6 | 14.4 | 25 | |
| Upper middle hourly pay quarter | Percentage in this pay quarter | 64.6 | 35.4 | 100 |
| Percentage of all employees | 16.2 | 8.9 | 25 | |
| Lower middle pay quarter | Percentage in this pay quarter | 48.8 | 51.2 | 100 |
| Percentage of all employees | 12.2 | 12.8 | 25 | |
| Lower hourly pay quarter (lowest paid) | Percentage in this pay quarter | 73.2 | 26.8 | 100 |
| Percentage of all employees | 18.3 | 6.7 | 25 | |
| Totals | 57.3 | 42.7 | 100 | |
Read more about pay quarters
Pay quarters give an indication of women's representation at different levels of the organisation.
To make this calculation, employers have to list all their employees from highest to lowest hourly pay. They then divide this list into 4 quarters, and work out the percentage of men and women in each quarter.
5. Bonus pay
In this organisation:
-
women’s median bonus pay was 0% lower than men’s – this means they earned £1.00 for every £1 that men earn when comparing median bonus pay
- women’s mean (average) bonus pay was 8.7% lower than men’s
- 10.0% of women and 8.3% of men received bonus pay
6. About Warwick District Council
- Registered address
- Riverside House, Milverton Hill, Leamington Spa, Warwickshire, United Kingdom, CV32 5HZ
- Sector
- Public administration and defence; compulsory social security, Public sector
- Snapshot date
- 31 March 2024
- Employee headcount
- 500 to 999 employees