Germany
vs Singapore.
Side-by-side comparison of 2026 income taxes. Enter your salary to see brackets, effective rates, deductions, and net take-home pay.
- At $75K: Singapore keeps more — €44,278 (20.6%) vs S$57,000 (4.0%).
- At $150K: Singapore keeps more — gap of about €32,170 per year.
- Top rates: Germany 45% · Singapore 24%.
- Hidden cost: Germany layers on heavier social contributions (21.1% combined vs 20.0%).
Take-Home Pay at Every Income Level (2026)
| Income | Germany | Singapore | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Take-Home | Eff. Rate | Take-Home | Eff. Rate | |
| €50,000 | €30,934 | 17.0% | S$38,750 | 2.5% |
| €75,000 | €44,278 | 20.6% | S$57,000 | 4.0% |
| €100,000 | €56,128 | 25.9% | S$74,350 | 5.7% |
| €150,000 | €84,980 | 31.3% | S$117,150 | 8.3% |
Germany vs Singapore Take-Home Pay (2026)
Where the Tax Gap Comes From
At a $75,000 salary, an German taxpayer's total tax bill (€30,722) and a Singaporean taxpayer's (S$18,000) end up looking different — and the difference is mostly driven by income tax brackets, not the headline tax rate. Germany charges €15,413 in income tax and €15,309 in mandatory social contributions; Singapore charges S$3,000 and S$15,000.
Bracket structure. Germany's system uses 5 brackets topping out at 45%, while Singapore uses 13 brackets topping out at 24%. The headline rate is rarely the rate anyone actually pays — what matters is where the brackets sit and how quickly income climbs into them. That's why two countries can have the same top rate and produce wildly different effective rates at $75K.
Standard deductions. Neither country provides a meaningful standard deduction at this income level.
Social contributions: the hidden tax. Headline income tax tells only half the story. Germany layers on combined social contributions of about 21.1% — including Pension (employee), Health insurance, Unemployment, Care insurance — versus 20.0% in the comparison country. For middle-income earners, this gap often outweighs differences in the income tax brackets themselves. It also gets ignored in casual "Germany vs Singapore taxes" debates that focus only on the marginal rate.
What it looks like at the extremes. At $50,000, the gap is smaller: Singapore keeps slightly more take-home pay. By $150,000, Singapore pulls ahead by roughly €32,170. The shape of the gap matters for relocation decisions — a system that's lighter at $50K can still be heavier at $200K once you cross higher brackets.
The bottom line. If you're earning around $75K, Singapore produces the higher take-home in 2026. If you're earning toward $150K, the same country still leads. Use the calculator above with your actual salary — the numbers are read directly from the statutory tables, not estimated.
How We Calculated This
Brackets and contribution rates are read directly from official 2026 statutory tables. Germany uses the grundfreibetrag: €11,784 convention; Singapore uses no standard deduction.
Income tax is computed bracket-by-bracket on income after the standard deduction. Mandatory social contributions are layered on top, applying statutory caps where they exist (e.g., Social Security wage base, CPF ceiling).
Single filer, gross employment income, no other deductions or credits. Local/regional taxes (state, provincial, Länder, regional IRPF) are not included unless noted. Currencies are not converted between countries — figures stay in native currency.
Tables are reviewed when each authority publishes its annual update (typically late prior year). See the data methodology page for source citations.
Which has lower taxes — Germany or Singapore?
It depends on income. At €75,000: Germany take-home is €44,278 (20.6% effective rate) vs Singapore take-home of S$57,000 (4.0%).
Do social contributions differ between Germany and Singapore?
Yes. Germany charges: Pension (employee) at 9.3%, Health insurance at 8.8%, Unemployment at 1.3%, Care insurance at 1.8%. Singapore charges: CPF (employee) at 20.0%.
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 about page for complete citations.