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Where do workers lose the biggest share of their salaries in Europe?

Euronews Published Jun 29, 2026 Reviewed Jul 2, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
For a single person without children earning the average wage, the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions ranges from 15.1% in Cyprus to 41.5% in Romania, with an EU average of 29.1%.
15.1 % · Cyprus41.5 % · Romania29.1 % · EU average
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
Average annual gross earnings in the EU are €37,958, while net earnings are €26,929, meaning €11,029 goes towards taxes and other deductions.
37958 € · EU average gross earnings26929 € · EU average net earnings11029 € · difference
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
In addition to Romania, six other countries see more than one-third of gross earnings go towards taxes and other deductions: Lithuania 39.1%, Belgium 37.6%, Slovenia 36.9%, Germany 34.8%, Denmark 34.0%, and Hungary 33.5%.
39.1 % · Lithuania37.6 % · Belgium36.9 % · Slovenia34.8 % · Germany34 % · Denmark33.5 % · Hungary
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
Luxembourg and Croatia have shares above the EU average, at 32.6% and 31.5% respectively.
32.6 % · Luxembourg31.5 % · Croatia
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
Greece has a share of 17.0% of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions.
17 % · Greece
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
Several countries cluster in the 22% to 25% range, with Czechia 21.6%, Ireland 21.6%, Portugal 21.8%, Spain 22.1%, Bulgaria 22.4%, Malta 23.1%, Estonia 23.2%, Italy 24.1%, Sweden 24.5%, and Slovakia 24.6%.
21.6 % · Czechia21.6 % · Ireland21.8 % · Portugal22.1 % · Spain22.4 % · Bulgaria23.1 % · Malta23.2 % · Estonia24.1 % · Italy24.5 % · Sweden24.6 % · Slovakia
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
Among the EU's four largest economies, Germany has the highest share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions at 34.8%, Spain the lowest at 22.1%, France 26.2%, and Italy 24.1%.
34.8 % · Germany22.1 % · Spain26.2 % · France24.1 % · Italy
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
For one-earner couples with dependent children, the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions ranges from -3.3% in Greece to 33.4% in Romania.
-3.3 % · Greece33.4 % · Romania
Eurostat, statistical agency
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In Poland, the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions is negative at -0.6%.
-0.6 % · Poland
Eurostat, statistical agency
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The EU average share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions falls to 8.0% for one-earner couples with children, compared with 29.1% for a single person without children.
8 % · EU average for one-earner couples with children29.1 % · EU average for single person without children
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Lithuania has a share of 23.8% of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions, the second-highest after Romania.
23.8 % · Lithuania
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
In Germany, the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions falls from 34.8% for a single person without children to 0.2% for a one-earner couple with two children, a drop of 34.6 percentage points.
34.8 % · Germany single person0.2 % · Germany one-earner couple with two children34.6 % · drop
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
Annual gross earnings are €47,514 for both a single person without children and a one-earner couple with two children, but the couple takes home €47,424 compared with €31,000 for the single person, a difference of €16,424.
47514 € · annual gross earnings47424 € · net earnings one-earner couple31000 € · net earnings single person16424 € · difference
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Poland has the largest difference in share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions between two-earner couples with two children and single persons without children, at 11.5 percentage points.
11.5 % · Poland difference
Eurostat, statistical agency
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Citation-ready fact
In Poland, social contributions take out almost 2.5 times the amount of what an employer pays for an average wage worker than personal income tax does.
about 2.5 · Poland social contributions vs personal income tax
Alex Mengden, economist at Tax Foundation
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Personal income tax and social security systems differ significantly across Europe, and so does the overall burden on workers’ pay. What matters most to workers, however, is how much of their salary they actually take home after taxes and compulsory deductions.

To show this, Euronews Business used Eurostat data to calculate net annual earnings as a share of gross pay, producing a take-home ratio. From this, it calculated the share of gross earnings going to taxes and other deductions.

In a few cases, the result is negative, meaning workers take home more than their gross earnings, due to family allowances and tax refunds.

The share taken in taxes and deductions also varies depending on marital status and whether workers have dependent children. This article mainly focuses on a single person without children, although the charts also include other household types, along with a brief analysis.

According to Eurostat's 2025 data, released in mid-2026, the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions varies widely across the continent. For a single person without children earning the average wage, it ranges from 15.1% in Cyprus to 41.5% in Romania. The EU average is 29.1%.

For example, average annual gross earnings in the EU amount to €37,958, while net earnings are €26,929. This means €11,029 goes towards taxes and other deductions.

In addition to Romania, six other countries see more than one-third of gross earnings go towards taxes and other deductions: Lithuania (39.1%), Belgium (37.6%), Slovenia (36.9%), Germany (34.8%), Denmark (34.0%) and Hungary (33.5%).

The share is also above the EU average in Luxembourg (32.6%) and Croatia (31.5%).

At the other end of the scale, Greece (17.0%) follows Cyprus, with less than one-fifth of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions.

Several countries cluster in the 22% to 25% range. Czechia (21.6%), Ireland (21.6%), Portugal (21.8%), Spain (22.1%), Bulgaria (22.4%), Malta (23.1%), Estonia (23.2%), Italy (24.1%), Sweden (24.5%) and Slovakia (24.6%) all record shares below one quarter.

Among the EU's four largest economies, Germany has the highest share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions, at 34.8%, while Spain has the lowest, at 22.1%. The figure is 26.2% in France and 24.1% in Italy.

Broadly speaking, Southern European countries tend to have lower shares of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions, while higher shares are more common in Central and Eastern Europe. Western Europe is more mixed, although Belgium and Germany rank among the highest. The Nordic and Baltic countries also show considerable variation, suggesting that geography alone does not explain the differences.

Having dependent children can significantly reduce the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions, particularly for one-earner couples. For this household type, the share ranges from -3.3% in Greece to 33.4% in Romania.

The figure is also negative in Poland (-0.6%), meaning net earnings exceed gross earnings thanks to family allowances and tax refunds.

The EU average falls to 8.0%, compared with 29.1% for a single person without children.

Romania stands out at the higher end of the ranking. The second-highest share is 23.8% in Lithuania, almost 10 percentage points lower. Apart from these two countries, the share exceeds 20% only in Hungary, Slovenia, Finland and Denmark.

Comparing a single person without children with a one-earner couple with two children, Germany stands out the most. The share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions falls from 34.8% to just 0.2%—a drop of 34.6 percentage points.

Annual gross earnings are €47,514 in both cases. However, a one-earner couple with two children takes home €47,424, compared with €31,000 for a single person without children—a difference of €16,424.

For two-earner couples with two children, the share going towards taxes and other deductions is lower than for a single person without children in every EU country except Greece.

Poland is among the countries with the largest difference, at 11.5 percentage points. In Greece, by contrast, the share of gross earnings going towards taxes and other deductions is the same in both scenarios.

Alex Mengden, an economist at the Tax Foundation, points to differences in how European countries tax labour and argues that the overall burden matters more than personal income tax alone.

For example, Denmark’s tax burden on labour lies below that of Poland, but Denmark appears at the top of the ranking because its labour taxation almost exclusively relies on personal income tax while in Poland, social contributions take out almost 2.5 times the amount of what an employer pays for an average wage worker than personal income tax does, landing it at the bottom of the ranking.” he told Euronews Business.

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