English-speaking countries: Tax Comparison 2026 | Obolus

Directly compare net income, deductions, and marginal burden using the TaxCompare engine.

English-speaking countries

Net income and deduction comparison

English-speaking countries currently shows the strongest net outcome for USA on a 60,000 EUR gross benchmark. After rent and PPP adjustment, the real lifestyle value is about 23,286 EUR.

Country
USA
Australia
United Kingdom
Ireland
Canada
Living Scenario
Comparison basis
Same gross salary
Same gross salary
Same gross salary
Same gross salary
Same gross salary
Annual gross income
€60,000
€60,000
€60,000
€60,000
€60,000
Taxes
€8,555
€12,517
€8,604
€11,200
€12,295
Social contributions
€4,850
€1,200
€6,041
€3,853
€3,134
Net income
€46,595
€46,283
€45,354
€44,947
€44,571
Effective tax rate
22.3%
22.9%
24.4%
25.1%
25.7%
Tax vs Net
Median Net (National)
€41,400113% of Median
€29,520157% of Median
€42,240107% of Median
€48,60092% of Median
€34,080131% of Median
Income Percentile
58% Percentile
77% Percentile
55% Percentile
45% Percentile
67% Percentile
Benchmark Rent (National)
-€19,200(€1,600/mo)
-€17,400(€1,450/mo)
-€18,000(€1,500/mo)
-€24,000(€2,000/mo)
-€16,800(€1,400/mo)
Housing Burden
41.2%
37.6%
39.7%
53.4%
37.7%
Net after Rent (Disposable)
€27,395
€28,883
€27,354
€20,947
€27,771
Real Purchasing Power (PPP)
€23,286PPP Weighted
€26,284PPP Weighted
€25,987PPP Weighted
€14,872PPP Weighted
€27,215PPP Weighted
Lifestyle Value
Pension Included?
Health Included?
~
~
~
Unempl. Included?
Notes
  • The US tax system combines federal, state, and local taxes.
  • Social security contributions are comparatively low, but healthcare costs are mostly private.
  • Progressive income tax system at the federal level with no nationwide social security contributions.
  • Medicare Levy, usually 2% of income, to fund the public health system.
  • Employers are required to pay Superannuation contributions (pension), which are not deducted from the employee's gross salary.
  • The United Kingdom uses a PAYE (Pay As You Earn) system.
  • Social security contributions (National Insurance) are lower than in Germany.
  • Progressive income tax system with two main tax rates (standard and higher rate).
  • In addition to income tax, USC (Universal Social Charge) and PRSI are charged as social contributions.
  • Tax credits play a central role and significantly reduce the actual tax burden.
  • Canada levies progressive federal and provincial taxes.
  • Social security contributions are moderate, and healthcare services are state-organized.

Benchmark layer for the real location decision

This module combines static median net income and benchmark rent with the live tax and deduction burden calculated by TaxCompare.

Canada

Source: derived income + editorial rent

medium

Median net income p.a.

€34,080

Benchmark rent p.a.

€16,800

(€1,400/mo)

Housing burden

37.7%

Tax burden API

25.7%

Lifestyle value

€27,215

Australia

Source: derived income + editorial rent

medium

Median net income p.a.

€29,520

Benchmark rent p.a.

€17,400

(€1,450/mo)

Housing burden

37.6%

Tax burden API

22.9%

Lifestyle value

€26,284

United Kingdom

Source: derived income + editorial rent

medium

Median net income p.a.

€42,240

Benchmark rent p.a.

€18,000

(€1,500/mo)

Housing burden

39.7%

Tax burden API

24.4%

Lifestyle value

€25,987

USA

Source: derived income + editorial rent

medium

Median net income p.a.

€41,400

Benchmark rent p.a.

€19,200

(€1,600/mo)

Housing burden

41.2%

Tax burden API

22.3%

Lifestyle value

€23,286

Ireland

Source: derived income + editorial rent

medium

Median net income p.a.

€48,600

Benchmark rent p.a.

€24,000

(€2,000/mo)

Housing burden

53.4%

Tax burden API

25.1%

Lifestyle value

€14,872

How to read this comparison

Short verdict

The English-speaking cluster groups several expat markets into one search decision: common language surface, very different deduction systems underneath. USA currently leads on net salary, while Canada remains the stronger signal for day-to-day purchasing power.

Who each country fits best

It is useful for people weighing the UK, Ireland, Canada, Australia and the US as a broader relocation set. USA usually fits candidates optimizing for take-home pay. Canada often looks stronger once rent and purchasing power are included.

Where the trade-offs sit

Without prioritization, a cluster page can feel like a loose list. The interpretation layer has to make the expat use case explicit. Canada carries the heaviest combined burden in the current benchmark, which is where the detailed next click matters.

How to read the benchmark

The real signal is how payroll structure and post-rent purchasing power diverge inside an apparently similar language block. The page is intentionally not just a data variation. It is meant to frame the decision and then route users into TaxApp or the next comparison.

Decision angle

This page should act as a cluster hub that quickly routes users into the right single comparison or country page. If these countries are realistic options, this page belongs in the small indexed winner set rather than the generic programmatic tail.

Country overview

USA landscape

USA

The USA offers maximum career opportunities and high gross income, along with a high degree of self-responsibility.

  • The US tax system combines federal, state, and local taxes.
  • Social security contributions are comparatively low, but healthcare costs are mostly private.
United Kingdom landscape

United Kingdom

The United Kingdom is a global financial hub with a strong, dynamic economy and excellent education.

  • The United Kingdom uses a PAYE (Pay As You Earn) system.
  • Social security contributions (National Insurance) are lower than in Germany.
Ireland landscape

Ireland

Ireland convinces with a strong tech sector, attractive tax rates, and an open, high-growth culture.

  • Progressive income tax system with two main tax rates (standard and higher rate).
  • In addition to income tax, USC (Universal Social Charge) and PRSI are charged as social contributions.
  • Tax credits play a central role and significantly reduce the actual tax burden.
Canada landscape

Canada

Canada is known for its quality of life, diversity, and a stable environment for families and professionals.

  • Canada levies progressive federal and provincial taxes.
  • Social security contributions are moderate, and healthcare services are state-organized.
Australia landscape

Australia

Australia offers a first-class lifestyle, high wages, and a relaxed environment within a strong economy.

  • Progressive income tax system at the federal level with no nationwide social security contributions.
  • Medicare Levy, usually 2% of income, to fund the public health system.
  • Employers are required to pay Superannuation contributions (pension), which are not deducted from the employee's gross salary.

Marginal burden comparison

The lines show effective deduction rates across rising gross income for the selected countries.

Methodology: Methodology & Data Sources

This analysis compares tax and social security systems based on the currently valid 2026 rules. To ensure global comparability, calculations are based on a standardized single filer without children. Local variations, such as US State Taxes or Swiss Cantonal Taxes, are represented as national averages. This simulation is intended for informational purposes and does not constitute professional tax or legal advice. Single, no Children -For US - County: NY State. For CA: County- Ontario. For CH - Kanton: Zuerich. For UK - Country: England.

Dataset: Jan 2026 (Ready) | Sources: OECD, BMF, IRS, HMRC, Statista

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