PayMetric Labs
Free Tool · 2026🇮🇪 Republic of Ireland

€30,000 Salary: Ireland Take-Home Pay 2026

Instant answer for €30,000 gross salary

On a €30,000 gross salary, your 2026 Irish take-home pay is €26,307/year (€2,192/month). Deductions: Income Tax €2,000, USC €433, PRSI €1,260, totalling €3,693. Effective rate: 12.3%.

Annual take-home

€26,307

After tax, USC, and PRSI

Monthly net pay

€2,192

Take-home per month

Effective rate

12.3%

€3,693 total deductions

Adjust the salary or marital status to explore different take-home figures

Common salaries:

Annual take-home pay

€26,307

Per month

€2,192

Per week

€506

Effective tax rate

12.3%

How your €30,000 is split

Take-home

€26,307

87.7%

Income Tax

€2,000

6.7%

USC

€433

1.4%

PRSI

€1,260

4.2%

Gross salary€30,000
Income Tax-€2,000
Universal Social Charge (USC)-€433
PRSI (Employee Class A, 4.2%)-€1,260
Total deductions-€3,693
Net take-home (annual)€26,307

Calculations use 2026 Irish tax rates (Budget 2026). PRSI is shown at 4.2% (Class A, Jan–Sep 2026). It rises to 4.35% from 1 October 2026. Earnings under €352/week are PRSI-exempt; a tapered credit (max €12/week) applies for the €352–€424/week band. Results assume standard tax credits only and exclude pension contributions, BIK, share options, or other reliefs. For precise advice consult a tax professional or Revenue.ie.

How €30,000 is taxed in Ireland (2026, single PAYE)

Income Tax · Standard rate (20%)

€30,000 taxable income

€6,000

20% rate

Tax Credits

Personal (€2,000) + Employee/PAYE (€2,000)

+€4,000

offset against tax

Total Income Tax

€2,000

USC · 0.5% band

€12,012 income

€60

0.5% rate

USC · 2% band

€16,688 income

€334

2.0% rate

USC · 3% band

€1,300 income

€39

3.0% rate

Total USC

€433

PRSI (Class A)

4.2% on reckonable earnings (Jan–Sep 2026)

€1,260

4.2% rate

Net Take-Home Pay

€2,192/month · €506/week

€26,307

Single PAYE employee with standard credits only. Does not include pension contributions, BIK, share options, or other adjustments.

€30,000 in context: Irish income benchmarks 2026

A €30,000 salary sits below the Irish standard rate band threshold of €44,000 for a single person in 2026. All income is taxed at the 20% standard rate of Income Tax before tax credits of €4,000 (for a standard PAYE employee). Your combined marginal rate is approximately 26.2% (Income Tax 20% + USC 2% + PRSI 4.2%). Take-home of €26,307 (€2,192/month) represents 87.7% of gross pay.

Average Irish wage

~€50,000 gross

€39,667/yr take-home

Your salary

€30,000 gross

€26,307/yr take-home

Higher rate threshold

€44,000 gross

€36,499/yr take-home

Reducing your tax liability on €30,000 in Ireland

At a marginal rate of approximately 26.2% (Income Tax 20% + USC 2% + PRSI 4.2%), there are meaningful ways to reduce your Irish tax liability and improve take-home pay. The following are general financial education points only — consult a qualified tax adviser, accountant, or financial broker for advice tailored to your situation.

Pension / PRSA

20% Income Tax relief on contributions

Each €5,000 contributed to a pension (PRSA, AVC, or occupational scheme) saves €1,000 in Income Tax — costing just €4,000 of take-home. Relief applies at your marginal Income Tax rate (20%). Note that USC and PRSI are not reduced by pension contributions in Ireland. Relief is claimed through Revenue; employer contributions are also tax-free within limits.

Tax credits

Claim all credits you are entitled to

This calculation includes only the Personal Credit (€2,000) and Employee/PAYE Credit (€2,000). You may be entitled to additional credits: Home Carer Credit (€1,800), Rent Tax Credit (up to €2,000 for renters), Tuition Fees Relief, Medical Expenses Relief (at 20%), or the Blind Person's Credit. Each credit directly reduces your tax bill euro for euro. Check myAccount on Revenue.ie to review credits you have not yet claimed.

USC planning

Understanding the USC 8% band

USC is charged at 8% on income above €70,044. Your income of €30,000 is below the €70,044 threshold at which the 8% USC rate begins, so you pay USC at the lower 0.5%, 2%, and 3% bands only. Be aware that this threshold does not increase with inflation automatically.

Contracting

Could contracting improve your net income?

A €30,000 PAYE salary and a contract role generating the same gross can have different net outcomes due to allowable business expenses, employer PRSI savings, and pension structuring through a Ltd company. Our Irish Contractor Calculator models these structures — sole trader, PAYE umbrella, and Ltd director — so you can compare take-home directly against your current salary.

Frequently asked questions

1

How much is a €30,000 salary take-home in Ireland in 2026?

On a gross salary of €30,000, your 2026 Irish take-home pay is €26,307 per year, which works out to €2,192 per month or €506 per week. Total deductions are €3,693: Income Tax €2,000, USC €433, and PRSI €1,260. Effective rate: 12.3%.

2

What income tax do I pay on €30,000 in Ireland?

On €30,000, the standard rate band for a single person is €44,000 at 20%. Standard rate (20%): €30,000 at 20% = €6,000. A Personal Tax Credit (€2,000) and Employee/PAYE Credit (€2,000) are then deducted from the gross tax, leaving Income Tax of €2,000.

3

How much USC do I pay on €30,000?

On €30,000, your USC totals €433. 0.5% band: €12,012 at 0.5% = €60. 2% band: €16,688 at 2.0% = €334. 3% band: €1,300 at 3.0% = €39. USC is charged at 0.5% on the first €12,012, then 2% to €28,700, then 3% to €70,044, then 8% above that.

4

How much PRSI is deducted from €30,000?

PRSI (Class A) is charged at 4.2% on all reckonable earnings above the weekly threshold (€352/week or roughly €18,304/year). On €30,000, PRSI totals €1,260. Note that PRSI rises to 4.35% from 1 October 2026; the figure shown uses the 4.2% rate applying from January 2026.

5

What is the marginal tax rate on €30,000 in Ireland?

On €30,000, your marginal rate — the combined Income Tax, USC, and PRSI applied to the next euro of income — is approximately 26.2% (Income Tax 20% + USC 2% + PRSI 4.2%). This differs from your effective rate of 12.3%, which averages deductions across all income. The marginal rate determines the real value of tax planning: every additional €1,000 of gross income retains approximately €738 after tax at this salary level.

6

Is this calculator for PAYE employees or self-employed?

This calculator applies PAYE tax credits: Personal Tax Credit (€2,000) and Employee/PAYE Credit (€2,000), totalling €4,000 in credits. Self-employed individuals do not receive the Employee Credit; instead they get an Earned Income Credit of up to €1,775. The self-employed also pay PRSI at Class S (4.2% of net income, not gross earnings), and are subject to a minimum PRSI contribution of €650. For contracting structures, see our Irish Contractor Calculator.

7

How do pension contributions reduce tax on €30,000 in Ireland?

On €30,000, pension contributions to a PRSA, AVC, or occupational scheme qualify for Income Tax relief at your marginal Income Tax rate of 20%. A €5,000 contribution saves €1,000 in Income Tax, costing just €4,000 of net take-home. Note that pension contributions do not reduce USC or PRSI in Ireland — the relief applies only against Income Tax. Contribution limits are age-related: up to 15% of net relevant earnings for those under 30, rising to 40% for those aged 60 and over. Revenue allows relief on contributions to an employer occupational scheme, personal PRSA, or a Retirement Annuity Contract (RAC). Consult a pension adviser or financial broker for personalised guidance.

Tax figures use 2026 Revenue.ie rates for PAYE employees in the Republic of Ireland. Assumes single marital status with standard Personal Tax Credit and Employee/PAYE Credit only. PRSI shown at 4.2% (Jan–Sep 2026 rate). Does not account for pension contributions, BIK, share options, additional tax credits, or other adjustments. Always verify with Revenue.ie or a qualified tax adviser for your specific situation.