Austria Income Tax Calculator 2026 — 7 Brackets + Family Bonus Plus

Calculate 2026 Austrian income tax across 7 brackets (0%–55%), social insurance ~18%, Family Bonus Plus €2,000/child, commuter deduction. EUR formatting. Austria vs Germany side-by-side comparison.

= €5,000 / month
Small: €372–€1,242 | Large: €372–€3,372
Social insurance: ~18.17% (auto-included)
Common incomes:
€0
Total Tax + Social (2026)
0%
Effective Rate
0%
Marginal Rate
€0
Annual Take-Home

Austria Tax Breakdown (2026)

Austria Income Tax 2026 — Complete Guide

Austria uses a 7-bracket progressive income tax system. The tax base is gross income minus social insurance contributions (which are deductible) and any other deductions such as the Pendlerpauschale. Credits like the Familienbonus Plus are then subtracted directly from the computed tax.

2026 Austria Tax Brackets

0% on ≤€12,816 | 20% on €12,816–€21,402
30% on €21,402–€35,003 | 40% on €35,003–€68,002
48% on €68,002–€103,210 | 50% on €103,210–€1,000,000
55% on income above €1,000,000

Social insurance: ~18.32% (pension 10.25% + health 3.87% + unemployment 3% + accident 1.2%)
Family Bonus Plus: €2,000/child direct credit | Single parent: €4,200/child

13th & 14th Salary (Holiday and Christmas Bonuses)

Austrian law entitles most employees to a 13th month (holiday bonus) and 14th month (Christmas bonus). These sonderzahlungen are taxed at a privileged flat rate of 6% on the first €620, then at the standard bracket rate on amounts above €620 (up to 1/6 of regular annual salary). This is a significant advantage — instead of 30–50% marginal tax, the first €620 attracts only 6%.

Example — €60,000 gross, no children

Social insurance: €60,000 × 18.32% = €10,992
Taxable income: €60,000 − €10,992 = €49,008
Income tax: 0%×€12,816 + 20%×€8,586 + 30%×€13,601 + 40%×€14,005
= €0 + €1,717 + €4,080 + €5,602 = €11,399
Total deductions: €22,391 | Effective: 37.3% | Take-home: €37,609
Extended

Austria vs Germany Tax Comparison

Side-by-side total tax burden for the same income in Austria versus Germany

Compare total tax burden (income tax + social contributions) for the same gross income in Austria vs Germany. Germany uses a formula-based tax with solidarity surcharge; church tax excluded from both for fair comparison.

Austria vs Germany — Total Tax at Selected Income Levels

Gross IncomeAustria Total TaxAustria Take-HomeGermany Total TaxGermany Take-HomeDifference

Austria Bracket-by-Bracket on Current Income

BracketRateIncome in BracketTax in Bracket

13th & 14th Salary — Privileged 6% Tax Rate (Sonderzahlungen)

Austrian employees typically receive a 13th month (Urlaubsgeld) and 14th month (Weihnachtsgeld). The first €620 is taxed at a flat 6%; the remainder up to 1/6 of annual salary at the standard rate. Enter your bonus/s below to calculate.

Typically 2 months salary (holiday + Christmas)

Frequently Asked Questions

What are Austria's 2026 income tax brackets?
Austria has 7 tax brackets for 2026: 0% on income up to €12,816; 20% on €12,816–€21,402; 30% on €21,402–€35,003; 40% on €35,003–€68,002; 48% on €68,002–€103,210; 50% on €103,210–€1,000,000; and 55% on income above €1,000,000. The 55% top rate makes Austria one of the highest-taxed EU countries for millionaires.
What is the Family Bonus Plus (Familienbonus Plus) in Austria?
The Familienbonus Plus is a direct tax credit of €2,000 per child per year (for children up to age 18 in Austria, or up to age 24 if in education). It reduces your tax liability directly — not just your taxable income. If your tax liability is less than €2,000, you receive a partial refund (Kindermehrbetrag). For 2026, the full €2,000 credit applies per child; single parents get €4,200 per child.
What is the Pendlerpauschale (commuter deduction) in Austria?
The Pendlerpauschale is a deduction for employees who commute to work. There are two levels: Small Pendlerpauschale (for commutes over 20 km, no adequate public transport): €372–€1,242/year depending on distance. Large Pendlerpauschale (inadequate public transport): €372–€3,372/year. Additionally, the Pendlereuro is a direct tax credit of €2 per km of one-way commute per year. The Pendlerpauschale reduces taxable income; the Pendlereuro reduces actual tax liability.
How does Austria's social insurance (~18%) work for employees?
Austrian employees pay approximately 18.32% of gross salary in social contributions for 2026: pension insurance 10.25%, health insurance 3.87%, unemployment insurance 3.00%, and accident insurance 1.20%. Total employee social contributions: ~18.32%. These contributions reduce gross income before income tax is applied, significantly lowering the taxable income for middle earners. Employers pay an additional ~21% in contributions on top of gross salary.
How does Austria compare to Germany for income tax?
Austria and Germany have similar progressive structures but differ in rates and brackets. Germany (2026): starts at 14% rising to 45% (above €277,826 for singles), plus 5.5% solidarity surcharge for high earners and church tax. Austria: starts at 20% but with a higher zero-rate threshold (€12,816 vs Germany's €11,784), and a higher 55% top rate for income over €1M. For middle earners (€40K–€80K), Austria is typically slightly more favorable; for earners above €100K, Germany is generally lower. Social contributions are also broadly comparable.