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Singapore vs Germany Tax Comparison 2026

Side-by-side comparison of 2026 income taxes in Singapore and Germany. Enter your salary to see brackets, effective rates, deductions, and net take-home pay.

Compare Income Taxes

$0$250k$500k

Singapore vs Germany: Take-Home Pay at Every Income Level (2026)

Income tax + social contributions calculated from official 2026 bracket data. Amounts shown in each country's local currency.

Income Singapore Germany
Take-Home Eff. Rate Take-Home Eff. Rate
S$50,000 S$38,750 2.5% €31,187 17.3%
S$75,000 S$57,000 4.0% €44,349 21.5%
S$100,000 S$74,350 5.7% €56,957 26.6%
S$150,000 S$117,150 8.3% €85,957 31.8%
Singapore: Top rate 24% · No standard deduction
Germany: Top rate 45% · Grundfreibetrag: €11,784 (in brackets)

Frequently Asked Questions

Which has lower taxes — Singapore or Germany?

It depends on income. At S$75,000: Singapore take-home is S$57,000 (4.0% effective rate) vs Germany take-home of €44,349 (21.5% effective rate). At S$150,000: Singapore take-home is S$117,150 vs Germany take-home of €85,957. Use the tool above for any salary.

Do social contributions differ between Singapore and Germany?

Yes. Singapore charges: CPF (employee) at 20.0%. Germany charges: Pension at 9.3%, Health insurance at 8.2%, Unemployment at 1.3%, Care insurance at 1.5%. These are applied on top of income tax and significantly affect your take-home pay — the comparison table above includes both in its take-home figures.

Where does this data come from?

All tax data comes from official government sources: IRS publications for the US, HMRC for the UK, and respective tax authorities for EU countries, supplemented by OECD Taxing Wages data. See our data methodology for complete citations.

18 source documents from IRS, OECD & governments
Deterministic math — never AI-generated numbers
Updated for 2026 tax year