Finland · 2026

Finland Salary calculator

Finland collects tax on pay through several channels at once: a progressive state tax, a flat municipal tax, the public broadcasting tax, and employee contributions for pension, unemployment and health insurance. This calculator runs a 2026 salary through all of them and applies the standard reliefs every wage earner receives, including the work income credit of up to 3,430 euros. Because each of the 291 mainland municipalities sets its own rate, the municipal tax here uses the income-weighted national average of 7.57%. Church tax, paid only by parish members, is left out.

Your take-home pay
27 896 €
2 325 € a month
20.3%
Effective rate
You keep 80% of your gross pay.
take-home pay 80%State income tax 3%Municipal income tax 7%Public broadcasting tax 0%Pension contribution (TyEL) 7%Unemployment insurance 1%Health insurance contributions 2%
Gross salary35 000 €
State income tax2026 scale, after the work income credit-1 075 €
Municipal income taxMainland average rate of 7.57%-2 352 €
Public broadcasting taxYle tax, capped at 160 euros-160 €
Pension contribution (TyEL)7.30% employee share-2 555 €
Unemployment insurance0.89% employee share-312 €
Health insurance contributionsDaily allowance 0.88% of pay, medical care 1.10% of taxable income-650 €
Take-home pay27 896 €

How it works

  1. Three contributions come off your gross pay: 7.30% for the TyEL pension, 0.89% for unemployment insurance, and a 0.88% daily allowance contribution once annual pay reaches 17,255 euros.
  2. Those contributions, together with an automatic 750 euro allowance for work expenses, reduce the income that gets taxed.
  3. Earners below about 28,000 euros also receive the basic deduction of up to 4,265 euros. What remains is taxable income.
  4. State tax follows the 2026 scale: 12.64% on taxable income up to 22,000 euros, then 19%, 30.25% and 33.25% bands, and 37.5% above 52,100 euros.
  5. Municipal tax (7.57% on average), the 1.10% medical care contribution and the Yle tax (2.5%, at most 160 euros) are charged on top.
  6. The work income credit then cuts the bill by up to 3,430 euros, and what is left over after every charge is your take-home pay.

Take-home = gross - state tax - municipal tax - Yle tax - pension - unemployment insurance - health insurance

Pension (7.30%), unemployment (0.89%) and daily allowance (0.88%) contributions come off gross pay and are themselves deductible, so taxable income is roughly 90% of salary after the standard allowances. State tax climbs through five bands to 37.5%, municipal tax adds a flat 7.57% on average, and the 1.10% medical care contribution plus the capped Yle tax sit on top. The work income credit of up to 3,430 euros is then taken off the taxes, leaving net pay.

12.64 to 37.5%
state tax bands for 2026; the top band starts at 52,100 euros of taxable income
7.57%
average municipal tax rate on the mainland in 2026
7.30 / 0.89 / 0.88%
employee contributions for pension, unemployment insurance and the daily allowance
3,430
maximum work income credit in euros; high earners keep at least 3,119

Where a salary sits in Finland

Statutory minimum wage None pay floors come from collective agreements
Median full-time earnings ≈ €44,400 Statistics Finland, about €3,700 a month
Top state band (37.5%) starts €52,100 of taxable income
Average municipal rate 7.57% Helsinki 5.84%, range 4.70% to 10.90%

Worked example

A 42,000 euro salary in 2026 pays out 31,907 euros a year, around 2,659 euros a month. Income taxes take 5,872 euros and social contributions 4,221 euros, so just over 24% of the salary goes in deductions.

Key facts

Tips

Take-home pay at different salaries, 2026

Gross salaryIncome taxesSocial contributionsTake-homeA month
€25,000€1,055€2,398€21,547€1,796
€35,000€3,588€3,516€27,896€2,325
€50,000€8,907€5,027€36,066€3,005
€60,000€12,808€6,034€41,158€3,430
€85,000€23,054€8,551€53,395€4,450
€100,000€29,201€10,062€60,737€5,061

Frequently asked questions

How much does my municipality change the result?+

Quite a lot at the extremes. Municipal rates in 2026 run from 4.70% in Kauniainen to 10.90% in Pomarkku, and this calculator sits at the 7.57% mainland average. Helsinki charges 5.84%, so a Helsinki resident keeps more than shown here, roughly 1.7% of taxable income more.

Is church tax included?+

No. Members of the Evangelical Lutheran and Orthodox parishes pay an extra 1% to 2.25% of taxable income depending on the parish. Around two thirds of Finns are members, so check your own position if the deduction applies to you.

What changed in Finnish payroll taxes for 2026?+

A fair amount. The top marginal rate on pay fell from about 59% to about 52%, the work income credit rose to 3,430 euros and no longer tapers away entirely, the TyEL employee contribution became a single 7.30% rate for ages 17 to 68, and the unemployment contribution went up from 0.59% to 0.89%. Trade union fees and the standard home office deduction also stopped being deductible.

Which deductions does the calculator apply for me?+

The ones every employee gets without claiming: the 750 euro work expense allowance, the basic deduction for low incomes, the work income credit, and the deduction of your pension, unemployment and daily allowance contributions from taxable income. Itemised claims such as commuting costs or the household expenses credit are not modelled, so they would lower your real tax further.

What is the public broadcasting tax?+

The Yle tax funds the national broadcaster. In 2026 it charges 2.5% of income above 15,150 euros, capped at 160 euros a year, which most full-time earners hit. Residents of Aland pay a separate media fee of 127 euros instead.

Do the same numbers apply to pensioners or the self-employed?+

No. Pension income has its own deduction and an extra levy above 60,000 euros, while the self-employed pay YEL pension contributions at their own confirmed income level and a higher 1.11% daily allowance rate. This page models an employee on a TyEL-insured wage.

Things to watch

Sources

Last updated: 2026-01-01 · Applies to 2026

Estimate only

This is an estimate for general guidance, not financial, tax, legal or medical advice. Figures can change and individual circumstances vary. Always confirm with the official sources listed before making decisions.

Reviewed by Vikas Dulgunde.

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