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Retail & Consumer

Aldi raises minimum pay to £14.33 per hour with bosses praising 'incredible contribution'

Aldi has announced a new top-up to its staff wages, retaining its crown as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's highest-paying supermarket

(Image: Derby Telegraph/Simon Deacon)

Aldi has revealed a pay enhancement for its workforce, maintaining its position as the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's highest-paying supermarket.

The revised minimum hourly rate, rising to £14.33 within the M25, will come into force from 1 September this year, as reported by .

It substantially surpasses the Real Living Wage of £12.60 per hour established by the Living Wage Foundation in October last year.

"This latest investment in pay is a reflection of [our staff's] hard work and the incredible contribution they make every single day," Aldi CEO Giles Hurley said.

"Our people are the driving force behind our success across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ... We're proud to remain the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's highest-paying supermarket and will continue to support our colleagues in every way we can," Hurley added.

The government raised both the minimum wage and the Real Living Wage in last October's budget, with the Real Living Wage climbing to £12.60 in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ and £13.85 in London.

The adjustment provided half a million Living Wage workers with a salary increase, though it attracted some criticism from struggling businesses, which contended the elevated benchmark represented an unsustainable rise in expenditure.

The British Retail Consortium stated that the minimum wage uplift would force retailers to spend an additional £2.73bn per year, a significant factor in the £7bn in extra costs post-Autumn budget.