Take-Home Pay

US vs Ireland:
take-home pay

On a $100,000 salary you'd keep about $79,180 in US (20.8% effective) versus about $65,911 in Ireland (34.1%). US leaves you with more.

Entered in your chosen currency, then converted into each place's local currency to tax it.
Exchange rates & assumptions

Rates only affect currency conversion, not the tax maths — each place is taxed in its own currency. Live rates are fetched on load (cached 12h); if that fails, approximate defaults are used.

US vs Ireland: what differs

US and Ireland tax salaries differently. In US, the payslip deductions are Federal income tax, Social Security and Medicare. In Ireland, they're Income tax, USC and PRSI. On this salary, US's effective tax rate works out to about 20.8% versus 34.1% in Ireland — use the calculator to compare any salary or add more countries.

US vs Ireland — FAQ

Do you pay more tax in US or Ireland?

On a $100,000-equivalent salary, Ireland has the higher effective tax rate (34.1% vs 20.8%), so you keep more of your pay in US. The gap shifts with income — try your own salary in the calculator above.

Is take-home pay higher in US or Ireland?

US — about $79,180 versus $65,911 on a $100,000 salary (both shown in USD).

What is deducted from salary in US and Ireland?

US: Federal income tax, Social Security and Medicare. Ireland: Income tax, USC and PRSI.

Estimate only. Not tax advice. Consult a qualified tax professional for your specific situation. Models a single, resident, employed person with no dependents and only universal allowances. Covers income tax + mandatory employee social contributions only — it excludes pensions, student loans, local/city taxes, tax-treaty effects, and most reliefs. Germany and France are flagged approximations; US state figures use 2025 schedules; tax years vary by region.