Why Compare Net Pay Across Borders?
Many workers in the Greater Region (Luxembourg, Lorraine, Saarland, Wallonia) have the choice of where to live while working in Luxembourg. The tax and social contribution differences can mean thousands of euros per year in take-home pay differences.
Key Factors in Cross-Border Pay
- Social contributions: Luxembourg employees pay the lowest social contributions of the four countries (~12.45%), compared to France (~22%) and Germany (~20.5%).
- Income tax rates: Luxembourg's top rate is 40%, similar to Germany (45%), but the brackets differ significantly.
- Marital benefit: Luxembourg's income-splitting for Class 2 (married) taxpayers and France's quotient familial both reduce the effective rate for couples.
FAQ
Do frontaliers pay tax in Luxembourg or their country of residence?
Generally, frontaliers pay income tax in Luxembourg (the country where they work), not their country of residence. Tax treaties between Luxembourg and France, Belgium, and Germany ensure this.
Why is Luxembourg net pay often higher than neighboring countries?
Luxembourg combines competitive gross salaries with a relatively favorable tax structure. The social minimum wage is high, and the progressive tax system is less steep than Belgium's or France's at mid-range incomes.
What are the social contribution differences between countries?
Luxembourg: ~12.45% employee. France: ~22%. Belgium: ~13.07%. Germany: ~20.5%. Luxembourg's lower social contributions significantly boost take-home pay.