Tax

Best Countries for Take-Home Pay ($150,000 salary)

How much of your salary you actually keep depends enormously on your country. These 10 countries are ranked by keep-rate — the share of a $150,000-equivalent gross salary left after income tax and social contributions — so you can compare tax burden fairly across currencies.

#RegionTake-home / yearKeep rateEff. taxDetails
1India₹1,50,000100.0%0.0%
2Singapore$120,21080.1%19.9%
3Australia$110,16273.4%26.6%
4New Zealand$108,11872.1%27.9%
5Canada$103,34268.9%31.1%
6United Kingdom£91,28660.9%39.1%
7Ireland€88,45659.0%41.0%
8Netherlands€ 85.81857.2%42.8%
9Germany77.302 €51.5%48.5%

How we ranked these regions

We take an equal gross salary in each country's local currency and run the same engine that powers each country's detailed salary-after-tax page. Because a dollar, pound and euro aren't directly comparable, we sort by keep-rate rather than the raw net amount.

The counter-intuitive result: countries with high headline tax rates often provide far more in return (healthcare, pensions), and some low-tax countries claw back a large share through mandatory social contributions rather than income tax.

At a $150k salary, India comes out on top with a 100.0% keep-rate, while Germany ranks last at 51.5% — a gap that adds up to real money over a career.

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⚠️ Rankings use simplified brackets and standard single-filer reliefs for estimation only. They are not tax advice. Verify with a qualified professional or the relevant tax authority.

Frequently asked questions

Which country has the highest take-home pay?

On a $150,000-equivalent salary, India lets you keep the most — about 100.0% of gross after income tax and social contributions — followed by Singapore and Australia.

Why do you rank by keep-rate instead of net amount?

Each country uses a different currency, so comparing raw net figures would be misleading. Keep-rate — the percentage of your gross salary you take home — is currency-neutral and lets you compare tax burden fairly across countries.

Which country taxes salaries the most?

Among the countries covered, Germany has the lowest keep-rate at this salary (51.5%), meaning the highest combined income tax and social-contribution burden.