How Luxembourg Salary Tax Really Works in 2026 (And How to Pay Less)
Marie Laurent
Senior Tax Consultant, IFA Luxembourg Member
Disclaimer: For informational purposes only. Not financial, tax or legal advice. Verify with administration.public.lu and consult a qualified professional before making decisions.
If you've just received your first Luxembourg payslip and stared at the deductions in disbelief, you're not alone. Luxembourg has one of the more complex income tax systems in Europe β 21 brackets, three different tax classes, social contributions, and a solidarity surtax all working together. Once you understand the logic, though, it makes sense.
This guide walks you through everything, with real numbers so you can see exactly where your money goes.
The Progressive Tax System
Luxembourg taxes income progressively. That means the first slice of your salary is taxed at a low rate, and only the amount above each threshold is taxed at higher rates. Nobody pays 40% on their entire salary β only on the portion above β¬200,000.
The brackets in 2026 run from 0% on your first β¬11,265 up to 40% on income above β¬200,000. Most workers earning between β¬40,000 and β¬80,000 pay an effective rate somewhere between 15% and 22%.
Your Three Tax Classes
Before calculating tax, you must know your tax class. Luxembourg assigns one of three:
- Class 1 β Single people, divorced without dependants
- Class 1A β Single parents, widowed persons. Receives a special CIM credit of β¬750/year
- Class 2 β Married couples and civil partners (PACS). Benefits from income splitting, which can significantly reduce the effective rate
Class 2 is particularly valuable. A household with one high earner and one partner earning little or nothing can effectively halve their taxable income β one of the most generous provisions in European tax law.
Social Contributions Come First
Before income tax is calculated, three social contributions are deducted from your gross salary:
| Contribution | Rate | Ceiling (~monthly) |
|---|---|---|
| CNS (Health) | 3.05% | ~β¬12,854 |
| CNAP (Pension) | 8.00% | ~β¬12,854 |
| Dependency | 1.40% | No ceiling |
These deductions reduce your taxable income, so you don't pay income tax on the social contributions you already paid. For most workers, social contributions amount to roughly 12.45% of gross salary.
The Solidarity Surtax
On top of income tax, Luxembourg applies a solidarity surtax:
- 7% of your income tax bill β applies to most taxpayers
- 9% for high earners (above a certain income threshold)
So if your income tax is β¬10,000, your solidarity surtax adds another β¬700.
Standard Deductions You Can Claim
Even before itemising, two standard deductions reduce your taxable income:
- Professional expenses: β¬540/year flat rate (or 2% of gross, up to β¬2,700, if higher)
- Special expenses: β¬480/year flat rate covering certain insurance premiums
A Practical Example
For a single person (Class 1) earning β¬60,000 gross in 2026:
- Social contributions β β¬7,400 (CNS + pension + dependency)
- Standard deductions β β¬1,020
- Taxable income β β¬51,580
- Income tax β β¬10,200
- Solidarity surtax (7%) β β¬714
- Net annual pay β β¬41,686 β roughly β¬3,474/month
How to Reduce Your Luxembourg Tax Bill Legally
- Contribute to a pension plan: 3rd-pillar contributions are deductible up to β¬3,200/year
- Maximise special expenses: life insurance, certain mortgage interest, and supplementary pension premiums all qualify
- Check your tax class: if married, ensure Class 2 is applied correctly on your tax card
- Home office: if working from home part-time, a proportion of rent/energy may be deductible
Calculate Your Exact Net Salary
Rather than estimating, use our calculator for a precise breakdown:
[π Use the Luxembourg Salary Tax Calculator](/calculators/luxembourg-salary-tax)
Enter your gross salary, tax class, and bonus β and get your full net breakdown with every deduction shown line by line.
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