Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Lidl announces pay rise for 16,000 as a result of living wage bump

The budget supermarket's lowest paid workers look set to receive a pay rise

Josie Cox
Monday 06 November 2017 11:54 GMT
Comments
Lidl has invested £3.5m to cover the cost of the rise
Lidl has invested £3.5m to cover the cost of the rise (Getty)

Lidl has announced that it will be increasing wages of more than 16,000 of its employees next year, as a result of a bump in the living wage.

The low-cost supermarket said that it would be increasing entry-level wages from £8.45 to £8.75 per hour outside of London and £9.75 to £10.20 within the M25, in-line with the increase in living wage announced on Monday.

The move will come into effect on 1 March. Lidl said it had committed to an additional annual investment of over £3.5m to cover the cost of the rise.

In 2015, it invested £9m when it claimed to become the first supermarket in the UK to pay the real living wage.

Unlike the national minimum wage, the living wage is an hourly rate of pay set independently and updated annually that is calculated with reference to the basic cost of living in the UK.

It is consistently slightly higher in London than it is outside of the capital.

“As the fastest growing supermarket our business is continuing to go from strength to strength, and it’s only right that we show our commitment to our colleagues in the same way that they commit to the business and our customers each and every day,” said Christian Härtnagel, chief executive of the German supermarket chain in the UK.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in