What €50,000 gross a year actually pays after Dutch tax in 2026 — calculated with and without the 30% ruling.
These figures come straight from Pravasi's 2026 Dutch tax engine — Box 1 income tax, the general and labour tax credits, and 8% holiday pay (vakantiegeld). The two columns show the same €50,000 salary taxed in full, and — if you are eligible — with the 30% ruling applied. Whether this salary qualifies is spelled out just below the table.
| Without 30% ruling | With 30% ruling (if eligible) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gross annual salary | €50,000 | €50,000 |
| Taxable income | €50,000 | €35,000 |
| Income tax (after credits) | €10,860 | €4,256 |
| Net annual salary | €39,140 | €45,744 |
| Net monthly salary | €3,262 | €3,812 |
| + Holiday pay / month | €333 | €333 |
| Take-home / month (incl. holiday pay) | €3,595 | €4,145 |
| Effective tax rate | 21.7% | 8.5% |
Important: at €50,000 gross the 30% ruling is out of reach. Its minimums (€48,013 standard, €36,497 for under-30s with a master's) apply to taxable salary after the 30% deduction — so in gross terms you need about €68,590, or about €52,139 on the under-30 route. Expect the left-hand column.
The same €50,000 salary buys very different lives across the Netherlands. The table below shows monthly take-home against typical living costs for a single person (30% ruling not assumed at this salary), ordered most affordable first.
| City | Take-home / mo | Living costs / mo | Left to save / mo |
|---|---|---|---|
| Groningen | €3,595 | €2,235 | €1,360 |
| Maastricht | €3,595 | €2,247 | €1,348 |
| Eindhoven | €3,595 | €2,329 | €1,266 |
| Delft | €3,595 | €2,343 | €1,252 |
| Rotterdam | €3,595 | €2,520 | €1,075 |
| The Hague | €3,595 | €2,630 | €965 |
| Utrecht | €3,595 | €2,716 | €879 |
| Amsterdam | €3,595 | €3,061 | €534 |
Living costs assume a single person renting a one-bedroom flat, with no money sent home. A family, a partner or regular remittances will change the picture — the calculator lets you set all of those.
This is an early-career skilled-migrant salary. The 30% ruling is mostly out of reach here: the standard route needs roughly €68,600 gross, because its minimum is measured on taxable salary after the 30% deduction. Those under 30 with a qualifying master's degree can qualify from about €52,100 gross. Cheaper cities stretch this salary noticeably further.