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Country Comparison · Updated June 2026

Self-Employed Tax Rates: Europe Compared

Self-employment tax in Europe is a different map than employee tax: Poland's lump-sum/IP-box regimes price B2B developers at 12–19% all-in; Czechia's 60/40 flat-expense regime lands near 15% to ~CZK 2M; Georgia's Individual Entrepreneur status at 1% of turnover (to ~$155k) anchors the bottom; while France's régime réel and Germany's full social-charges path reach 40–50% for unincorporated professionals.

The structural insight: in much of Europe the *form* of self-employment (flat-rate regime vs real-cost regime vs incorporated) moves the burden more than the country does. The same €90k freelance income pays ~€13k in Poland's ryczałt, ~€18k in Czechia, ~€30k in Spain's autónomo system, and ~€40k under German Freiberufler full-freight.

Country comparison tool · 2026

Take-home on your salary

Metric A B

2026 estimates. Net pay combines income tax + employee social charges (US column modeled in a no-income-tax state); special expat regimes can improve the destination figure.

Key insights

Key insights

  • B2B sweet spots: Georgia 1–3% · Poland 12% · Romania ~16% · Czechia ~15–18%.
  • Regime form beats country choice for freelancers.
  • €90k freelance: €13k (PL) → €40k (DE) of total burden.
  • Watch false-self-employment enforcement (ES, NL, DE).
  • EU platform-reporting closes the invisible-income era.
$100,000 gross → net by country (single, 2026)
CountryEffective tax + socialNet / yearNet / month
🇺🇸 United States30%$79,180$6,598
🇬🇧 United Kingdom27%$71,535$5,961
🇩🇪 Germany38%$60,567$5,047
🇫🇷 France33%$62,389$5,199
🇳🇱 Netherlands33%$64,130$5,344
🇪🇸 Spain29%$63,589$5,299
🇵🇹 Portugal31%$54,762$4,564
🇮🇹 Italy35%$58,127$4,844
🇨🇭 Switzerland22%$78,000$6,500
🇨🇦 Canada28%$72,000$6,000
🇦🇺 Australia26%$74,000$6,167
🇸🇬 Singapore12%$88,000$7,333

Regime shopping, mapped

The European B2B sweet spots, ranked by all-in burden at €90k: Georgia IE (1–3%, non-EU but treaty-rich), Poland ryczałt for IT (12% + capped social), Romania micro-company (~16% all-in), Czechia flat-expense (~15–18%), Bulgaria (10% flat + social). The catch column: substance rules, client-concentration tests (Spain's "false autónomo" enforcement), and the EU's creeping platform-reporting net.

Social charges hide in every comparison: European "income tax" figures without employee social contributions understate wedges by 10–20 points; US figures without the 7.65% FICA do the same. Every number on this page includes both sides' full employee burden.

What the wedge buys (and doesn't)

European wedges return visible services: healthcare without premiums, university without $200k price tags, childcare at €100–€600/month, year-long parental leave, and pensions with real replacement rates. The US wedge returns lower rates and higher variance – superb for high-earning, healthy, child-free years; expensive for everything else.

The honest framework: compute your family's actual US service costs (health premiums + deductibles, childcare, college funding, disability/life insurance you self-buy) as a percentage of income, add it to the US wedge, then compare. For median families that adjusted wedge runs 38–45% – European-grade, without the services guarantee.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Which country lets you keep the most of $100k?

Among major destinations: Singapore (~88%), the US in no-tax states (~75%), the UK (~73%), Spain (~71%), the Netherlands (~67%), Germany (~62%), Belgium (~60%) – see the full gross-to-net table above. Special expat regimes (Beckham, IFICI, 30% ruling) move European answers 5–15 points.

Are European taxes really that much higher?

The wedges are higher (typically +8–15 points at $100k), but they bundle healthcare, childcare subsidies, education, and pensions that Americans buy privately. Service-adjusted, median-family burdens converge; top-earner burdens don't – the US remains the high-earner's structure.

Do these figures include social security contributions?

Yes – every figure combines income tax plus the employee's social charges (FICA in the US, NI in the UK, Sozialabgaben in Germany, etc.). Employer-side contributions are excluded consistently on both sides.

How do expat tax regimes change the picture?

Dramatically: Spain's Beckham (24% flat), Portugal's IFICI (20%), Italy's impatriati (~21.5% effective), the Dutch 30% ruling, and Croatia's nomad exemption (0%) all cut standard wedges by 5–20 points for qualifying inbound workers – the regime pages model each.

What about US citizens moving to Europe?

Citizenship-based taxation makes them pay the higher of the two systems: FTCs zero the US bill in high-tax Europe; low-tax setups leave residual IRS liability above the $132,900 FEIE. The US-expat pages on this site cover the mechanics.

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