Germany vs California: take-home pay comparison
Germany's §32a curve + Sozialversicherung against California federal + state + FICA — common cross-Atlantic comparison.
German workers considering a US tech-company offer (and Americans considering Berlin/Munich) face very different tax structures. Germany applies a continuous §32a EStG polynomial for income tax + four mandatory Sozialversicherung branches (~20% of gross combined for SK I). California stacks federal income tax + California state income tax + FICA.
The German curve hits 42% at €68,481 (Spitzensteuersatz); California reaches 41.3% combined federal + CA state at around $190k. At mid incomes German net is materially lower than California net (Sozialversicherung is the main culprit); at very high incomes (>$1M) California overtakes Germany due to the 13.3% top state bracket. Native currency on each side; FX is shown as a pin only, not used to compute any line.
Side-by-side at common gross levels
EUR/USD shown at indicative parity — interpret native net values, not the FX-adjusted delta.
| Gross (annual) | Germanynative: € | United States — Californianative: $ | Net delta (right − left) |
|---|---|---|---|
| €40,000 / $40,000 | €26,842 (32.9%) | $33,418 (16.5%) | $6,576 |
| €80,000 / $80,000 | €47,868 (40.2%) | $61,199 (23.5%) | $13,331 |
| €120,000 / $120,000 | €68,313 (43.1%) | $85,586 (28.7%) | $17,273 |
| €200,000 / $200,000 | €112,479 (43.8%) | $134,308 (32.8%) | $21,829 |
Frequently asked questions
- How much more take-home does €80,000 yield in California vs Germany?
- At €80,000 gross on each side using 2026 rates: Germany retains €47,868 (40.2% effective), California retains $61,199 (23.5% effective). Native-currency comparison — no FX conversion applied.
- What is the marginal-rate difference between Germany and California at €80,000?
- At €80,000 gross, the next 100 of gross retains €52 in Germany (marginal rate 47.6%) and $61 in California (marginal rate 39.0%). This matters for bonus, overtime, or salary-sacrifice decisions — the marginal rate applies to the next unit earned, not the average.
- At what salary level is the take-home gap biggest between Germany and California?
- Across the 40k–250k single-filer sweep, the largest net delta is at €250,000 gross: California net is higher by $23,143 per year. Above and below this point the gap is smaller, driven by the interaction of each side's band thresholds + social-contribution caps.
- What does this Germany vs California comparison include?
- Both sides use each tax authority's published 2025/26 rates: income tax, social-insurance contributions, and any statutory levies routed through payroll. The numbers are the same ones the full /de and /us/ca calculators produce — open either page for the full per-line breakdown.
- What does this comparison NOT model?
- Currency conversion is NOT applied — the table shows each side in its native currency. Use a live FX rate to convert if you need a single-currency view. Pension contributions, salary-sacrifice schemes, benefits-in-kind, region-specific surcharges (Scotland for UK, Comunidad Autónoma for ES, Bundesland for DE), and cost-of-living differences are not modeled here. The comparison is a tax-stack-only view.