哪些欧洲国家的税后工资最高?
Which European countries have the best salaries after taxes?

原始链接: https://www.euronews.com/my-europe/2026/04/02/which-european-countries-have-the-best-salaries-after-taxes

## 欧洲工资与劳动力成本:2026年快照 新的欧洲统计局数据揭示了欧洲工资和劳动力成本的显著差异。**卢森堡的平均净时薪最高,为49.7欧元**,紧随其后的是冰岛、挪威和丹麦等北欧国家。相反,**拉脱维亚、罗马尼亚和保加利亚的工资最低**,平均每小时在10.5至12.9欧元之间。 然而,**东欧国家的工资增长速度最快**。保加利亚在2021年至2025年间净工资增长了惊人的**69.4%**,其次是波兰(66%)和罗马尼亚(61.3%)。与此同时,挪威、瑞典和意大利的工资增长相对缓慢。 **卢森堡的雇主总劳动力成本最高,为每小时57欧元**,包括工资和社保缴款。法国、瑞典和斯洛伐克面临最高的非工资成本(社保缴款),而罗马尼亚、立陶宛和马耳他则拥有最低的此类支出。总体而言,欧盟劳动力成本在2025年上涨了4.1%,其中保加利亚增幅最大(+13.1%)。

## 欧洲税后工资:复杂的图景 一篇近期在 Euronews 上的文章引发了 Hacker News 上关于哪些欧洲国家提供最佳税后工资的讨论。然而,评论者很快指出了文章的缺陷,主要在于它使用了*雇主*成本(总工资+社保缴款),而不是实际*员工*净收入。 许多人认为,仅仅关注税后收入具有误导性。生活成本、医疗保健质量和公共服务是至关重要的因素。例如,虽然瑞典可能对财富征收较低的税款,但法国提供更低的生活成本和更优质的医疗保健。 几位用户指出数据遗漏——英国(不再向 Eurostat 提供数据)和比利时缺席。其他人强调了月薪与小时工资在欧洲比较中的重要性。最终,共识倾向于考虑比税率更广泛的因素,包括生活质量和为所缴税款获得的价值。 许多评论员强调了可支配收入的重要性,并在比较国家时考虑免费托儿等福利。
相关文章

原文
By&nbspAlessio Dell'Anna&nbsp&&nbspDamaso Jaivenois

Published on Updated

If you work in Luxembourg, you're in luck — you're likely being paid the highest hourly wage on average across the whole of Europe

The Grand Duchy at the heart of the continent offers an average net wage of €49.7 per hour, according to new Eurostat figures released this week.

A group of Nordic nations comes next, with Iceland in second place (€47.0), followed by Norway (€45.8) and Denmark (€44.7).

At the other end of the table, Latvia (€12.9), Romania (€12.9) and Bulgaria (€10.5) have the lowest average hourly wage.

Which countries are seeing the fastest net salary growth?

It's not all bad news for Eastern Europe, however. Between 2021 and 2025, Bulgaria recorded the largest increase in net salaries, with a 69.4% surge.

Poland also performed extremely strongly with wages after taxes rising by 66% over the same period, followed by Romania with a 61.3% surge.

Workers in Croatia, Lithuania and Hungary also saw their net pay increase by more than 50% on average.

On the other hand, pay slips remained relatively stable in Norway (5.5%), Sweden (6.1%) and Italy (10.6%), which reported the slowest increase in Europe between 2021 and 2025.

Germany, France and Spain also posted wage growth below the EU average of 20%.

Where do taxes weigh the most on employers and employees?

Starting and running a medium-sized business in the EU can be costly for employers.

For businesses with at least 10 employees, workers cost around €35 per hour in total. The rate rises to €38 when looking solely at Eurozone countries.

Around a quarter of that money is for non-wage costs, like social contributions. But there are huge differences from one country to another in how labour costs are allocated.

Employers in France (32%), Sweden (32%) and Slovakia (29%) sustain the highest non-salary costs, while that share is almost zero in Romania, Lithuania and Malta, according to Eurostat.

Spanish and Italian businesses report higher taxes on work than the EU average, while reporting net hourly wages below the bloc's average.

Which countries record the highest labour costs in total?

Employers in Luxembourg pay the most in total, around €57 per hour, when you include wages and social contributions, the highest rate in the EU.

That’s a full €5 more per hour than second-placed Denmark and almost €10 more than the Netherlands in third place.

But the gap between the top and the bottom of the ranking is glaring.

In Bulgaria, labour costs are just €12 per hour, the lowest in the EU, and a little over €15 in Hungary.

According to Eurostat, hourly labour costs at the whole economy level rose by 4.1% in the EU and by 3.8% in the euro area, compared with 2024.

Malta was the only country where total labour costs went down (-0.5%), while the largest increases were recorded in Bulgaria (+13.1%), Croatia (+11.6%) and Slovenia (+9.3%).

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com