PAYE & USC Calculator — Ireland 2026
See a detailed band-by-band breakdown of your Irish income tax (PAYE) and USC for 2026. Includes pension relief, tax credits, and marital status options. For a full payslip view including PRSI, use the Take-Home Pay Calculator.
For planning purposes only — confirm with your accountant or Revenue.
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Detailed Tax Breakdown
Enter your salary above to see the detailed breakdown.
What this calculator does
This tool provides a detailed band-by-band breakdown of Irish income tax (PAYE) and Universal Social Charge (USC) for the 2026 tax year. Unlike the full take-home pay calculator, it focuses specifically on the income tax and USC components — showing exactly which rate each portion of your income falls into and what credits reduce your final bill.
It is particularly useful for understanding how changing your salary, marital status, or pension contributions affects your actual income tax and USC liability — and for checking whether you are on the correct tax credits with Revenue.
How PAYE and USC work in Ireland
Income Tax (PAYE) — Rate Bands 2026
Income tax uses a two-rate system. All income up to the standard rate band is taxed at 20%; income above it is taxed at 40%.
| Status | Standard Rate Band | Higher Rate Band |
|---|---|---|
| Single | €0–€44,000 @ 20% | Above €44,000 @ 40% |
| Single Person Child Carer | €0–€48,000 @ 20% | Above €48,000 @ 40% |
| Married — one income | €0–€53,000 @ 20% | Above €53,000 @ 40% |
| Married — two incomes | €0–€88,000 @ 20% | Above €88,000 @ 40% |
Tax credits are then subtracted from the gross tax. Standard credits for a PAYE employee: Personal Tax Credit €1,875 + Employee Tax Credit €1,875 = €3,750 total.
USC — Rate Bands 2026
USC is a separate tax on gross income (not reduced by pension contributions). The 2026 bands are:
| Band | Rate |
|---|---|
| First €12,012 | 0.5% |
| €12,013–€27,382 | 2% |
| €27,383–€70,044 | 4% |
| Above €70,044 | 8% |
| Self-employed income above €100,000 | +3% surcharge = 11% |
If total income is €13,000 or less, no USC applies. Medical card holders with income ≤€60,000 pay a maximum of 2% on all income above €12,012.
Worked examples
Example 1 — Single person earning €50,000
No pension, no medical card.
| Item | Calculation | Annual | Monthly |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Salary | — | €50,000 | €4,167 |
| Income Tax @ 20% (to €44k) | €44,000 × 20% | €8,800 | — |
| Income Tax @ 40% (above €44k) | €6,000 × 40% | €2,400 | — |
| Gross Income Tax | €8,800 + €2,400 | €11,200 | — |
| Less: Tax Credits | Personal + Employee | −€3,750 | — |
| Net Income Tax (PAYE) | — | €7,450 | €621 |
| USC Band 1 (0.5%) | €12,012 × 0.5% | €60 | — |
| USC Band 2 (2%) | €15,370 × 2% | €307 | — |
| USC Band 3 (4%) | €22,618 × 4% | €905 | — |
| Total USC | — | €1,272 | €106 |
| Total PAYE + USC | — | €8,722 | €727 |
Example 2 — Married (one income), €80,000, 5% pension
Married rate band (€53,000). Pension contribution of €4,000.
| Item | Calculation | Annual |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Salary | — | €80,000 |
| Pension (5%) | €80,000 × 5% | −€4,000 |
| PAYE Taxable | €80,000 − €4,000 | €76,000 |
| Income Tax @ 20% (to €53k) | €53,000 × 20% | €10,600 |
| Income Tax @ 40% (€53k–€76k) | €23,000 × 40% | €9,200 |
| Less: Credits (Personal + Employee) | — | −€3,750 |
| Net Income Tax | — | €16,050 |
| USC (on €80,000 gross) | Bands applied to full gross | €4,074 |
| Total PAYE + USC | — | €20,124 |
How to interpret your result
The most important insight from this calculator is the split between the 20% band and the 40% band. Once your income crosses the standard rate cut-off, every additional euro of income (including a pay rise, overtime, or bonus) is taxed at 40% plus USC and PRSI on top — a combined marginal rate of approximately 52% for most workers above the higher rate threshold.
Why pension contributions matter more at higher income
If you are in the 40% band, every €1,000 of pension contribution saves €400 in income tax. The contribution also reduces your PAYE taxable income, which can push some income back below the 40% threshold — a double saving. USC is not reduced by pension contributions, but the income tax saving alone makes pensions one of the most tax-efficient planning tools available to PAYE workers.
Check your tax credits are correct
Millions of euros in tax credits go unclaimed in Ireland each year. Log into Revenue's myAccount and review your tax credit certificate (TCC). Look for: health expenses (20% relief on qualifying medical costs), tuition fee relief (20% on qualifying third-level fees), the Home Carer Credit (€1,800 if your spouse cares for a dependent), and the Rent Tax Credit (up to €1,000 for private renters).
Common mistakes with PAYE and USC
- Not updating your tax credit certificate after a life event: Getting married, having a child, becoming a carer, or starting to pay rent all entitle you to additional credits. Revenue does not automatically apply all credits — you must claim them via myAccount.
- Assuming the 40% rate applies to all income: The 40% rate only applies to income above the standard rate cut-off (€44,000 for a single person). Income below this is taxed at 20%. So a person earning €50,000 does not pay 40% on the full €50,000 — only on the €6,000 above the band.
- Forgetting USC applies from the first euro: USC applies on gross salary from the first euro once annual income exceeds €13,000. Unlike PRSI, which has a weekly threshold, USC has no weekly threshold — it is calculated on annual income and spread equally across pay periods.
- Thinking pension contributions reduce USC: Pension contributions only reduce income for PAYE income tax purposes. USC is calculated on your full gross salary, regardless of how much goes to a pension. Many people assume pension savings reduce both taxes — they do not.
- Missing split-year relief when changing jobs: If you change jobs mid-year, your new employer may put you on emergency tax if your P45 or revenue record is delayed. Ensure you register your new employment on Revenue's myAccount promptly to receive the correct credits from day one.
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