Switzerland · 2026
Switzerland Salary calculator
Work out what a Swiss salary leaves behind in 2026. The model here is a single person with no children who lives in the city of Zurich, belongs to no church and is taxed in the ordinary procedure. Gross pay first loses 5.3% for AHV, IV and EO and 1.1% for unemployment insurance, then direct federal tax and the combined Zurich cantonal and municipal tax come off the remainder. Occupational pension deductions differ from plan to plan, so they stay out of this estimate.
| Gross salary | CHF 35'000 |
| Direct federal taxSingle tariff 2026, after social contributions | -CHF 135 |
| Cantonal and municipal taxCanton of Zurich 95% plus city of Zurich 119% of the basic tax | -CHF 2'052 |
| AHV, IV and EOOld-age, survivors, disability and income compensation, 5.3% | -CHF 1'855 |
| Unemployment insurance (ALV)1.1% of pay up to CHF 148,200 | -CHF 385 |
| Take-home pay | CHF 30'573 |
How it works
- Social insurance comes first: 5.3% of the full salary for AHV, IV and EO, plus 1.1% unemployment insurance on pay up to CHF 148,200 a year.
- What remains counts as taxable income here, rounded down to the next CHF 100. Standard deductions such as professional expenses, insurance premiums and pension contributions are not applied.
- Direct federal tax follows the 2026 tariff for single taxpayers: nothing up to CHF 15,200, marginal steps from 0.77% to 13.2%, and a flat 11.5% of the whole taxable income once it passes CHF 793,900.
- The Zurich basic tax runs from 0% on the first CHF 7,000 to 13% above CHF 266,700. Canton (95%) and city (119%) each charge a percentage of it, 214% combined for 2026.
- Take-home pay is the gross salary minus both taxes and both contributions. A twelfth of it gives the monthly figure.
Take-home = gross - AHV/IV/EO - ALV - federal tax - (basic tax x 2.14)
Both social contributions come straight off gross pay, 5.3% without a ceiling and 1.1% capped at CHF 148,200 of salary. The remainder faces two progressive tariffs: the federal single scale with marginal rates from 0.77% to 13.2%, and the Zurich basic tax from 2% to 13%. The basic tax is then scaled by the combined cantonal and city multiplier of 214% for 2026.
- 5.3%
- employee share of AHV, IV and EO, no upper limit
- 1.1%
- employee share of unemployment insurance, on pay up to CHF 148,200
- 0.77 to 13.2%
- marginal steps of the 2026 federal tariff for singles, flat 11.5% above CHF 793,900
- 214%
- canton of Zurich 95% plus city of Zurich 119%, applied to the basic cantonal tax
Where a salary sits in Switzerland
| Median full-time gross wage | ≈ CHF 81,500 | CHF 6,788 a month, BFS wage structure survey 2022 |
| ALV contributions stop | CHF 148,200 | no unemployment insurance above this |
| Top Zurich band (13%) begins | CHF 266,700 | taxable income, basic tax |
| Federal flat rate of 11.5% | CHF 793,900 | taxable income, single tariff |
Worked example
A CHF 100,000 salary in the city of Zurich, 2026 keeps CHF 79,366.89 for the year, about CHF 6,614 a month. The deductions are CHF 5,300 for AHV, IV and EO, CHF 1,100 for unemployment insurance, CHF 2,261.95 direct federal tax and CHF 11,971.16 cantonal and municipal tax, an effective rate of about 20.6%.
Key facts
- Three layers tax a Swiss salary: the federation through its own tariff, then the canton and the commune as percentages of one shared basic tax.
- For 2026 the canton of Zurich charges 95% of the basic tax, down from 98% in 2025, and the city of Zurich charges 119%.
- AHV, IV and EO contributions apply to every franc of salary, while unemployment insurance ends at CHF 148,200 a year.
- Direct federal tax never exceeds 11.5% of taxable income, so most of a Zurich tax bill is cantonal and municipal.
Tips
- Pillar 3a payments are deductible at all three levels and the yearly cap is adjusted regularly, so confirm the current maximum before December.
- Professional expenses, further training, debt interest and pension fund buy-ins all cut taxable income once you file a return.
- Your commune matters: each one sets its own multiplier on the same basic tax, and the spread across the canton of Zurich is wide.
- Married couples and registered partners are assessed jointly on a different scale, so the single tariff here does not carry over to them.
Take-home pay at different salaries, city of Zurich 2026
| Gross salary | Income tax | Social contributions | Take-home | A month |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHF 60,000 | CHF 5,803 | CHF 3,840 | CHF 50,357 | CHF 4,196 |
| CHF 80,000 | CHF 9,495 | CHF 5,120 | CHF 65,385 | CHF 5,449 |
| CHF 100,000 | CHF 14,233 | CHF 6,400 | CHF 79,367 | CHF 6,614 |
| CHF 150,000 | CHF 27,671 | CHF 9,580 | CHF 112,749 | CHF 9,396 |
| CHF 250,000 | CHF 62,183 | CHF 14,880 | CHF 172,936 | CHF 14,411 |
Frequently asked questions
Why the city of Zurich?+
Every Swiss commune sets its own multiplier on the cantonal basic tax, so one national answer does not exist. This page takes the largest city as its reference point: for 2026 the canton of Zurich charges 95% of the basic tax and the city adds 119%. The same salary in another commune, or another canton, produces a different bill.
Where is the occupational pension (BVG)?+
Left out on purpose. Pension fund deductions depend on your age, your plan and how your employer splits the premium, so no single rate would be honest. Expect a further slice of pay to be withheld for it, alongside accident and daily sickness premiums that many employers also deduct.
Is church tax included?+
No. Members of the recognised churches pay an extra multiplier on the basic tax, collected with the ordinary bill. People with no registered affiliation never pay it, which is the assumption used here.
What about tax at source for foreign employees?+
Employees without a C permit usually have tax withheld from each payslip under a separate monthly scale instead of filing upfront. The year tends to land near the ordinary assessment modelled here, and above CHF 120,000 of income a full return becomes compulsory anyway.
Why might my real tax bill be lower than this?+
A filed return deducts professional expenses, insurance premiums, pillar 3a payments, pension contributions and more before the tariffs apply. This page removes only the statutory social contributions, so it sits at the cautious end. The commune also levies a small fixed personal tax that is ignored here.
Which figures are these and when do they change?+
Tax year 2026 throughout: the federal tariff published by the ESTV for 2026, the Zurich income tax scale that applies from 2026, the cantonal multiplier of 95% set for 2026 and 2027, the city multiplier of 119%, and the 2026 contribution rates. Communes confirm their multipliers each winter, so check again for 2027.
Things to watch
- These figures are an estimate for one specific profile, not financial or tax advice. Your own assessment depends on your deductions and circumstances, so confirm anything that matters with the cantonal tax office or an adviser.
- Payslips in Zurich normally withhold occupational pension, accident and often daily sickness premiums as well, none of which appear here.
- Church members pay an additional multiplier on the basic tax that this page leaves out.
- Employees taxed at source follow a separate monthly scale, so these figures only approximate their position.
Sources
- Tariffs for the direct federal tax, Form 58c 2026 · Federal Tax Administration (ESTV)
- Kantonsblatt Zürich, income tax tariff valid from 2026 (§ 35 StG) · Federal Tax Administration (ESTV)
- Current municipal tax multipliers, canton of Zurich · Canton of Zurich
- Tax calculation and multiplier, city of Zurich · City of Zurich
- Leaflet 2.01, salary contributions to AHV, IV and EO · AHV/IV information centre
- Leaflet 2.08, contributions to unemployment insurance · AHV/IV information centre
Last updated: 2026-01-01 · Applies to 2026
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.
- Representative basis: single, no children, no church membership, resident in the city of Zurich, ordinary assessment for tax year 2026.
- Taxable income is gross pay minus AHV/IV/EO and ALV contributions, rounded down to CHF 100. Professional expenses, insurance premiums, pillar 3a and pension deductions are not applied, so real assessments usually come out somewhat lower.
- Occupational pension (BVG), accident (NBU) and daily sickness premiums are excluded; they vary by employer and plan.
- Church tax and the small fixed personal tax are excluded.
- Federal tax under CHF 25 is not collected, mirroring the official tariff table.
Reviewed by Vikas Dulgunde.