Understanding Your Salary After Tax in Ireland (2026 Guide)
The Irish tax system can be complex, with multiple deductions appearing on your payslip. This comprehensive guide explains exactly how your net pay is calculated in 2026, helping you understand where your money goes and how to legally reduce your tax bill.
1. The Three Main Deductions Explained
When you look at your payslip, you'll see three primary deductions that reduce your gross salary to your net take-home pay:
PAYE (Income Tax)
Pay As You Earn is the main income tax. You pay 20% on income up to the standard rate cutoff point (€44,000 for singles in 2026) and 40% on everything above that.
USC
Universal Social Charge is a tax on gross income. Rates range from 0.5% to 8%. The 2% band ceiling increased in Budget 2026, slightly reducing this tax for many.
PRSI
Pay Related Social Insurance funds social welfare benefits. Most employees (Class A) pay 4.1% (increasing to 4.35% in Oct 2026). It doesn't reduce your income tax liability.
2. Tax Credits: Your "Discount" Coupon
Tax credits reduce your tax bill euro-for-euro. They are deducted after your tax is calculated, not from your gross salary.
- Personal Tax Credit: €2,000 (Single) / €4,000 (Married)
- Employee Tax Credit: €2,000 (PAYE workers only)
- Rent Tax Credit: Up to €1,000 per person in 2026 (claimed via Revenue MyAccount).
Example: If your calculated tax is €10,000 and you have €4,000 in tax credits, you only pay €6,000 to Revenue.
3. The "Marginal Rate" Trap (Why 52%?)
You often hear people say they lose "half their raise to tax". This is because of the Marginal Tax Rate. Once your earnings exceed the standard rate cutoff (€44,000 for singles), every additional Euro you earn is taxed at:
This means for every €100 raise or bonus, you might only take home €48. This is why tax efficiency strategies like pension contributions become crucial for high earners.
4. Marriage and Joint Assessment
Ireland has a unique system for married couples called Joint Assessment. It allows you to transfer unused tax credits and standard rate bands between spouses.
In 2026, the standard rate band for a two-income couple can be up to €88,000. If one spouse earns €30,000 and the other earns €60,000, Joint Assessment can save thousands in tax compared to being assessed as two single people.
5. Pension Contributions: The #1 Tax Hack
Contributing to a pension is the most effective way to reduce your income tax in Ireland. Contributions are taken from your gross salary before PAYE is applied.
If you are on the higher rate of tax (40%), a €100 contribution only costs you €60 from your net pay, because you save the €40 that would have gone to the taxman.Use our Pension Calculator to see your specific relief limits.
6. Emergency Tax: How to Fix It
If your net pay looks unusually low (often 50% less than expected), you might be on Emergency Tax. This happens when your employer hasn't received a Revenue Payroll Notification (RPN) for you.
Solution: Log in to Revenue MyAccount and register your new employment immediately. Once the RPN is issued, your employer will refund any overpaid tax in your next payroll.