Estimate your take-home pay
Use the Irish Net Salary Calculator to estimate PAYE, USC, PRSI, pension deductions, and monthly take-home pay.
Quick answer
- Gross pay is your pay before deductions; net pay is what is left after deductions.
- Taxable pay can be different from gross pay if pension contributions or certain adjustments apply.
- PAYE, USC, PRSI, pension, benefits, and payroll deductions can all affect the amount paid into your bank.
- When comparing job offers, use gross salary for the offer and net salary for household budgeting.
On this page
Gross pay
Gross pay is the salary or wage before deductions. Job adverts and employment contracts usually quote gross pay, because deductions depend on your tax status, credits, pension, and payroll setup.
Taxable pay
Taxable pay is the amount used for a particular tax calculation. It may be lower than gross pay when certain pension contributions or allowable deductions apply. USC and PRSI may use different figures from Income Tax.
Net pay
Net pay is the amount left after deductions such as PAYE, USC, PRSI, pension, benefits, and other payroll items. This is the figure most people use for rent, mortgage planning, bills, savings, and day-to-day budgeting.
Frequently asked questions
Is net pay the same as take-home pay?
In normal salary language, yes. Net pay or take-home pay is the amount left after deductions.
Why is taxable pay different from gross pay?
Certain deductions or adjustments can reduce the figure used for Income Tax, but not necessarily for every deduction.
Should I negotiate based on gross or net salary?
Employers usually negotiate and quote gross salary. Net salary depends on your own tax and deduction position.
Is this guide tax advice?
No. It is general information for planning. Use official guidance or a tax adviser for your own situation.
Can I use the calculator for filing?
Use it as an estimate only. Complex activity such as DeFi, staking, mining, business trading, or many swaps may need specialist software or advice.
Sources & references
Key takeaways
- Gross pay is before deductions; net pay is after deductions.
- Taxable pay can differ from gross pay depending on pension and payroll treatment.
- USC, PRSI, and Income Tax may not all use the exact same deduction logic.
- Use net pay for budgeting, but use gross pay when comparing job offers.