Income & Tax

How Irish Take-Home Pay Is Calculated

How Irish take-home pay is calculated from gross salary: income tax, USC, PRSI, and tax credits. 2025 rates for single PAYE workers.

Verified against Revenue.ie - Tax Relief Charts on 4 Mar 2026 Updated 4 March 2026 4 min read
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Summary

Ireland uses a PAYE (Pay As You Earn) system where employers deduct income tax, Universal Social Charge (USC), and Pay Related Social Insurance (PRSI) from each payslip. Ireland’s income tax has just two brackets (20% and 40%), but the effective tax burden is reduced by generous tax credits - the personal credit and PAYE credit together mean the first portion of income is effectively tax-free.

How it works

Your take-home pay is your gross salary minus three deductions:

  1. Income tax - two brackets (20% standard rate, 40% higher rate), reduced by tax credits
  2. Universal Social Charge (USC) - four progressive bands from 0.5% to 8%
  3. PRSI (Pay Related Social Insurance) - a flat 4.1% on all earnings (Class A employee, 2025)

Tax credits reduce the income tax liability directly (euro-for-euro), not the taxable income. The two main credits for a single PAYE worker total €4,000, effectively making the first €20,000 of income tax-free at the 20% rate.

Income Tax Bands (2025)

Ireland’s income tax for a single person in 2025:

Taxable incomeRate
Up to €44,00020% (standard rate)
Above €44,00040% (higher rate)

Tax Credits

Tax credits reduce your income tax bill directly:

CreditAmount (2025)
Personal Tax Credit (single)€2,000
PAYE Employee Tax Credit€2,000
Total for single PAYE worker€4,000

Net income tax = max(0, gross tax - tax credits). With €4,000 in credits, a single PAYE worker pays no income tax on the first €20,000 of income (since €20,000 x 20% = €4,000).

Universal Social Charge (USC)

USC is a separate charge on gross income with four bands:

Income bandUSC rate
Up to €12,0120.5%
€12,013 - €25,7602%
€25,761 - €70,0444%
Above €70,0448%

USC applies to total income - there is no tax-free threshold (though individuals earning €13,000 or less per year are exempt from USC entirely).

For Class A employees (most PAYE workers) in 2025:

ComponentRate
Employee PRSI4.1%

PRSI at 4.1% applies to all earnings with no upper ceiling. There is a weekly earnings threshold of €352 below which no PRSI is payable, and a PRSI credit that tapers for weekly earnings between €352 and €424.

The formula

Net Pay = Gross - max(0, Income Tax - Tax Credits) - USC - PRSI

Where

Income Tax= 20% on first EUR 44,000, 40% above (single person)
Tax Credits= Personal EUR 2,000 + PAYE EUR 2,000 = EUR 4,000 for single PAYE worker
USC= Universal Social Charge: 4 bands from 0.5% to 8%
PRSI= Pay Related Social Insurance: 4.1% of all earnings (Class A)

Worked example

EUR 45,000 gross annual salary, single PAYE worker

1

Income tax: first EUR 44,000 at 20%

EUR 44,000 x 20% = EUR 8,800

= EUR 8,800

2

Income tax: remaining EUR 1,000 at 40%

EUR 1,000 x 40% = EUR 400

= EUR 400

3

Gross income tax

EUR 8,800 + EUR 400 = EUR 9,200

= EUR 9,200

4

Tax credits (personal + PAYE)

EUR 2,000 + EUR 2,000 = EUR 4,000

= EUR 4,000

5

Net income tax

max(0, EUR 9,200 - EUR 4,000) = EUR 5,200

= EUR 5,200

6

USC band 1: first EUR 12,012 at 0.5%

EUR 12,012 x 0.5% = EUR 60.06

= EUR 60.06

7

USC band 2: EUR 12,013 - EUR 25,760 at 2%

EUR 13,748 x 2% = EUR 274.96

= EUR 274.96

8

USC band 3: EUR 25,761 - EUR 45,000 at 4%

EUR 19,240 x 4% = EUR 769.60

= EUR 769.60

9

Total USC

EUR 60.06 + EUR 274.96 + EUR 769.60 = EUR 1,104.62

= EUR 1,104.62

10

PRSI (4.1% of gross)

EUR 45,000 x 4.1% = EUR 1,845

= EUR 1,845

11

Total deductions

EUR 5,200 + EUR 1,104.62 + EUR 1,845 = EUR 8,149.62

= EUR 8,149.62

Result

Take-home pay = EUR 45,000 - EUR 8,149.62 = EUR 36,850.38/year (EUR 3,070.87/month)

Assumptions & limitations

  • Uses 2025 rates for income tax, USC, and PRSI
  • Assumes a single person with no dependants - married couples have different standard rate band cutoffs (up to €88,000 jointly assessed)
  • Tax credits include only the personal credit (€2,000) and PAYE credit (€2,000) - additional credits (rent, home carer, medical expenses, etc.) are not modelled
  • PRSI assumes Class A employee (most common for PAYE workers) - other PRSI classes have different rates
  • Does not model the USC exemption for individuals earning €13,000 or less
  • Does not model the PRSI credit for low earners (weekly income €352-€424)
  • Does not model: pension contributions (reduce taxable income), BIK (benefit in kind), or Revenue job-seeker credits
  • Ireland has no regional or local income taxes - the same rates apply nationwide

Sources

Gov
income-tax take-home-pay ie ireland usc prsi paye