Japan · 2025 (Reiwa 7)

Read in 日本語

Japan Income tax calculator

Estimate the tax taken from a salary in Japan for the 2025 tax year (Reiwa 7): national income tax plus the resident tax billed by your municipality. Enter an annual gross salary and the calculator builds both tax bases the way the National Tax Agency does, applying the employment income deduction, the deduction for social insurance premiums and the basic deduction before any rate touches your pay. Figures reflect an employee in Tokyo, under 40 and single, whose only income is salary. The premiums themselves are not charged here; for take-home pay including them, use the salary calculator.

Annual gross salary
Income tax (national + resident)
¥361,800
Employment incomesalary after the statutory employment income deduction¥3,560,000
Deductible social insurance premiumsreduce both tax bases; not charged by this calculator¥732,750
National income taxbrackets from 5% to 45% plus the 2.1% reconstruction surtax119600%
Resident tax10% levy less the adjustment credit, plus 5,000 yen per head242200%
Income after income tax¥4,638,200

How it works

  1. Salary is first converted into employment income by the statutory deduction (kyuyo shotoku kojo). At least 650,000 yen comes off, more as pay rises, until the deduction caps at 1,950,000 yen for salaries above 8.5 million yen.
  2. Deductible social insurance premiums are then estimated at Tokyo rates: 4.955% health, 9.15% pension and 0.55% employment insurance, with health premiums capped at 16.68 million yen of pay and pension premiums at 7.8 million yen. These reduce both tax bases but are not part of the tax shown.
  3. The national base subtracts the premiums and a basic deduction of 950,000 yen down to 580,000 yen depending on income (the 2025 amounts), then rounds down to the nearest 1,000 yen. Brackets from 5% to 45% apply via the quick-deduction table, and the 2.1% reconstruction surtax goes on before the result rounds down to the nearest 100 yen.
  4. The resident base uses its own 430,000 yen basic deduction and the same premium deduction. A flat 10% applies, the 2,500 yen adjustment credit comes off, and the 5,000 yen per-capita charge (1,000 yen of it the forest environment tax) goes on. Nothing is due while net income stays at or under 450,000 yen.
  5. The headline figure is the two taxes added together; the breakdown shows each on its own, so you can see how much goes to the state and how much to your city and prefecture.

income tax = national tax + resident tax, each charged on salary less the employment income deduction, deductible premiums and a basic deduction

Both taxes start from the same employment income figure. The national side removes deductible premiums and a basic deduction of up to 950,000 yen, taxes the remainder in seven brackets from 5% to 45% using the quick-deduction table, then multiplies by 1.021 for the reconstruction surtax. The resident side removes the premiums and 430,000 yen, charges a flat 10%, takes off the 2,500 yen adjustment credit and adds the 5,000 yen per-capita charge. Taxable bases round down to the nearest 1,000 yen and the national tax to the nearest 100 yen.

650,000 to 1,950,000
employment income deduction taken off salary first, 2025 table
950,000 to 0
national basic deduction, falling as income rises (580,000 for most full-time earners)
5% to 45%
seven national brackets on taxable income, NTA quick-deduction table
1.021
reconstruction surtax multiplier on national tax, in force to 2037
10% + 5,000
resident tax levy and per-capita charge, less the 2,500 adjustment credit

When Japanese income tax starts to bite

National tax first due ≈ ¥1,600,000 salary below this the deductions absorb everything
NTA average salary, 2024 ¥4,780,000 private-sector survey figure
20% bracket begins ¥3,300,000 taxable about ¥6.7 million of gross salary on this profile
Top 45% bracket ¥40,000,000 taxable an effective 45.945% with the surtax

Worked example

A ¥5,000,000 gross salary in Tokyo, 2025 carries ¥361,800 of tax in total: ¥119,600 national income tax and ¥242,200 resident tax. The ¥1,440,000 employment income deduction and ¥732,750 of deductible premiums hold the national taxable base down to ¥2,147,000, which lands in the 10% bracket.

Key facts

Tips

Frequently asked questions

Why are national income tax and resident tax shown together?+

Because both fall on the same salary. National tax is withheld through the year, while resident tax is assessed by your municipality on the previous year and collected from June. Adding them gives the full income tax cost of a steady salary, and the breakdown still lists each one separately.

Why enter gross salary rather than taxable income?+

Few people in Japan know their taxable income off-hand, because three deductions sit between it and the payslip figure: the employment income deduction, social insurance premiums and the basic deduction. The calculator derives all three from the gross amount using the 2025 tables.

What is the 2.1% reconstruction surtax?+

A supplement on national income tax introduced to fund rebuilding after the 2011 Tohoku earthquake. It has applied since 2013 and is scheduled to run until 2037, so 2.1% is added to the bracket result before the final rounding.

Will this match the tax on my payslip?+

Not month by month. Withholding follows monthly tables and is settled in the December year-end adjustment, so individual payslips drift around the true figure. The number here is the settled annual amount. Resident tax also lags by a year: what your employer deducts from June relates to the previous calendar year.

Does it matter where in Japan I live?+

A little. The 10% plus 5,000 yen resident tax structure is the standard that nearly every municipality applies, though a few prefectures add small supplements. Health insurance rates also vary by prefecture, which nudges the deductible premiums and with them the tax. This calculation uses Tokyo figures throughout.

Which reliefs are left out?+

Spouse and dependant deductions, life and earthquake insurance deductions, iDeCo contributions, the medical expenses deduction and housing loan credits. Each would lower the bill, so read the result as the figure for a single employee claiming only the basics.

Things to watch

Sources

Last updated: 2025-04-01 · Applies to 2025 (Reiwa 7)

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.

Related calculators