🇩🇪 Germany vs Switzerland 🇨🇭 — Take-Home Pay
A side-by-side look at how much of your salary you actually keep in each country.
🇩🇪 Germany
= 45.000 € per year
Estimated monthly take-home
2.504 €
30.047 € per year · 33.2% goes to tax & contributions
| Item | Per year | Per month |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | 45.000 € | 3.750 € |
| Income tax (Lohnsteuer) | −5.436 € | −453 € |
| Solidarity surcharge (Soli)below Freigrenze | −0 € | −0 € |
| Pension insurance9.3% | −4.185 € | −349 € |
| Health insurance8.75% (incl. avg. Zusatzbeitrag) | −3.937 € | −328 € |
| Long-term care insurance1.8% | −810 € | −67 € |
| Unemployment insurance1.3% | −585 € | −49 € |
| Take-home pay | 30.047 € | 2.504 € |
Estimate only — not tax advice. Figures are estimates based on publicly available tax rules and may not reflect your full circumstances. See our methodology & sources. Always confirm with an official tax authority or a licensed adviser before making decisions.
🇨🇭 Switzerland
= CHF 100'000 per year
Estimated monthly take-home
CHF 6'140
CHF 73'675 per year · 21.8% goes to tax & contributions
| Item | Per year | Per month |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | CHF 100'000 | CHF 8'333 |
| Income tax | −CHF 1'745 | −CHF 145 |
| Zürich tax | −CHF 13'680 | −CHF 1'140 |
| AHV/IV/EO5.3% old-age/disability/income-compensation | −CHF 5'300 | −CHF 442 |
| ALV (unemployment)1.1% up to CHF 148,200 | −CHF 1'100 | −CHF 92 |
| BVG pension~5% occupational pension (to your pension) — approximation | −CHF 4'500 | −CHF 375 |
| Take-home pay | CHF 73'675 | CHF 6'140 |
⚠ Zürich figures are estimates pending verification — see methodology.
Estimate only — not tax advice. Figures are estimates based on publicly available tax rules and may not reflect your full circumstances. See our methodology & sources. Always confirm with an official tax authority or a licensed adviser before making decisions.
Effective tax at a glance
| Income level | Germany | Switzerland |
|---|---|---|
| Low | 26.400 € → 27% tax | CHF 60'000 → 19% tax |
| Median | 44.000 € → 33% tax | CHF 100'000 → 22% tax |
| High | 88.000 € → 40% tax | CHF 200'000 → 26% tax |
Why the numbers differ
Germany: German take-home pay (Nettogehalt) is determined by income tax (Lohnsteuer), the solidarity surcharge (Soli), optional church tax, and — usually the largest piece — social insurance contributions for pension, health, care and unemployment. The income tax itself is calculated from a continuous formula, not fixed brackets, so the rate rises smoothly as you earn more.
Switzerland: Switzerland has some of the highest salaries in the world and, by European standards, relatively low taxes — but how much you keep depends heavily on where you live. Income tax has three layers: federal (low), cantonal, and communal, and the cantonal/communal part varies enormously between municipalities.
The biggest driver is usually the balance between income tax and social contributions, and where each country sets its brackets. A country with lower headline income tax can still leave you with less if its social contributions are high — which is exactly why comparing the take-home figure, not the tax rate, matters when you're deciding where to work.
Cost of living then changes the real picture again. Use our cost-of-living comparator alongside these numbers before making a relocation decision.
Frequently Asked Questions
+Is take-home pay higher in Germany or Switzerland?
It depends on the salary level. Compare the effective-rate table and run both calculators above with your own figures — and remember to weigh cost of living, not just tax.
+Why do Germany and Switzerland tax differently?
Germany relies on Einkommensteuer, Soli and Sozialversicherung, while Switzerland uses federal, cantonal and communal income tax. The mix of income tax versus social contributions, and where the brackets sit, drives most of the difference.
Estimate only — not tax advice. Figures are estimates based on publicly available tax rules and may not reflect your full circumstances. See our methodology & sources (last reviewed June 2026). Always confirm with an official tax authority or a licensed adviser before making decisions.