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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Netherlands VS COUNTRY B Italy

Side-by-side analysis of income tax, effective rates, and take-home pay for Netherlands and Italy in 2026.

OVERVIEW
The Netherlands is significantly cheaper than Italy at every income level under the standard tax system. Italy's IRPEF (imposta sul reddito delle persone fisiche, 23%–43%) combined with INPS employee contributions (~9.49% up to the INPS ceiling, approximately €50,000) and regional/municipal surcharges produces effective rates substantially above the Netherlands across all benchmarks. At €60,000: Netherlands saves €5,800/year. At €90,000: €7,300/year. The major exception: Italy's impatriati regime provides a 50% income exemption for qualifying professionals who relocate to Italy from abroad for up to 5 years — potentially making Italy comparable to or cheaper than the Netherlands for eligible earners at mid-to-high income levels.
Section 01

The Big Picture

Top-line rates and effective take-home for a typical earner — including income tax, social contributions, and applicable surcharges.
🇳🇱
COUNTRY A
Netherlands
TAX RATE
49.50%
Top Box 1 Rate
Box 1: 36.97% up to €38,441; 49.50% above — includes national insurance; heffingskortingen (tax credits) reduce low-income burden significantly; 30% ruling for qualifying expats
🇮🇹
COUNTRY B
Italy
TAX RATE
43%
Top IRPEF Rate
IRPEF 23%–43% + INPS employee contributions ~9.49%; regional surcharge 1.23%–3.33%; municipal surcharge 0%–0.9%; impatriati regime 50% exemption for qualifying new residents
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from ItalyNetherlands at €90,000
€7,300
That's €608 back in your pocket
Section 02

Tax Savings by Income Level

Net take-home after all income tax, social contributions, and surcharges — for a single employee with no dependents.
GROSS INCOME
🇳🇱 NL TAX
🇮🇹 IT TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
€30,000
€2,750
€8,200
€5,450 cheaper in NL
€54,500
€60,000
€16,300
€22,100
€5,800 cheaper in NL
€58,000
€90,000
€31,700
€39,000
€7,300 cheaper in NL
€73,000
€150,000
€64,200
€71,200
€7,000 cheaper in NL
€70,000
💡

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🇳🇱

Netherlands Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Cheaper at every income level under the standard system: Netherlands saves €5,450–€7,300/year versus Italy across all four benchmarks. The advantage is remarkably consistent — the gap widens from €5,450 at €30,000 to €7,300 at €90,000, then holds at €7,000 at €150,000. Italy's IRPEF rate of 35%–43% above €28,000 combined with INPS contributions and regional/municipal surcharges produces a persistently higher effective burden than the Netherlands' 49.50% Box 1 (which, despite its high headline rate, applies only above €38,441 with meaningful credits below that threshold)
  • 30% ruling for qualifying expats: Qualifying employees recruited from abroad can exclude 30% of Dutch salary from income tax for up to 5 years (capped at €233,000). Italy offers the impatriati regime (50% income exclusion) — a nominally higher percentage exclusion than the Dutch 30%. However, the Dutch 30% ruling covers more employee categories, has no minimum activity requirement, and doesn't require the employee to register as the Italian regime does
  • Certainty of cost: The Netherlands' tax system, while high, is highly predictable. Italy's effective rate depends on the region of residence (regional IRPEF surcharge varies from 1.23% in Sardinia to 3.33% in some regions), municipal surcharge (0%–0.9%), and INPS contribution rates by category. The Netherlands' national uniformity simplifies cross-border financial planning
  • No INPS-equivalent ceiling complexity: Italy's INPS employee contribution (~9.49%) applies up to an annual ceiling (approximately €50,000) for most workers — with different rates for executives (dirigenti) and different contribution types. The Netherlands' national insurance is embedded uniformly in Box 1 with no separate visible ceiling mechanism
− CONS
  • No equivalent to Italy's impatriati 50% exclusion: Italy's impatriati regime provides a 50% income exemption for qualifying professionals relocating from abroad (not having been Italian tax residents for the prior 3 years) for 5 years. A €90,000 earner under impatriati pays IRPEF only on €45,000 effective income — potentially reducing Italy's total burden to approximately €19,500 versus the Netherlands' €31,700. For eligible professionals: Italy's impatriati regime can make Italy substantially cheaper than the Netherlands
  • 49.50% Box 1 above €38,441: Despite the Netherlands' advantage in this comparison, the 49.50% Box 1 rate applying from a very low threshold means that for earners specifically between €38,441 and €60,000 (where Italy's IRPEF is 35%), the Netherlands' marginal rate is significantly higher than Italy's — it is only the Netherlands' lower base (credits + lower first bracket) that keeps the total Dutch burden lower
  • Box 3 wealth tax on savings and investments: Dutch residents pay Box 3 on savings and investment assets above ~€57,000. Italy has no annual wealth tax on financial assets — IVAFE (imposta sul valore delle attività finanziarie all'estero) applies to foreign financial assets held by Italian residents at 0.2%, but domestic assets face no equivalent. For domestic Italian investors: no recurring wealth-style tax applies, giving Italy a marginal advantage for asset accumulation
🇮🇹

Italy Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Impatriati regime: 50% income exclusion for qualifying new residents for 5 years: Italy's regime dei lavoratori impatriati provides a 50% reduction on taxable income for qualifying employees and self-employed workers who have not been Italian tax residents for the prior 3 years and commit to residing in Italy for at least 2 years. The exclusion applies for 5 years. For a €90,000 earner: effective taxable income = €45,000 — IRPEF approximately €10,560. Total Italy burden under impatriati: approximately €15,000–€17,000 versus Netherlands' €31,700 — making Italy materially cheaper for eligible arrivals
  • Forfettario flat-rate regime for self-employed (up to €85,000/year): Self-employed workers in Italy earning under €85,000/year can elect the regime forfettario — paying a flat 15% tax (5% for the first 5 years for new businesses) on a percentage of revenue, with no IRPEF, no VAT, and simplified bookkeeping. A freelancer earning €60,000 under forfettario pays approximately €9,000 flat — versus the Netherlands' €16,300 for the same gross income. This is a compelling advantage for independent contractors and consultants
  • No capital gains tax on most financial asset sales for individuals: Italy does not impose IRPEF on capital gains from listed share sales for private individuals — instead applying a flat 26% sostitutiva tax. For long-term investors with very large gains, Italy's flat 26% compares favourably to the Netherlands' Box 3 approach. Primary residence: fully exempt from CGT
  • Lifestyle and cost of living outside major cities: Italy's regional variation means that cities like Bologna, Turin, and smaller cities offer significantly lower costs of living than Amsterdam. Central Italy (Tuscany, Umbria) and southern Italy provide world-class quality of life at 30–50% lower living costs than the Netherlands, partially offsetting the income tax disadvantage for standard tax system earners
− CONS
  • IRPEF reaches 43% above €50,000 + INPS ~9.49%: Italy's combined employee burden — IRPEF (23% to 43%), INPS contributions (~9.49% up to ceiling ~€50,000), and regional surcharge (~1.23%–3.33%) — produces effective rates substantially above the Netherlands. At €90,000: total Italian burden approximately €39,000 versus €31,700 in the Netherlands — a €7,300/year disadvantage for standard-system Italian earners
  • Regional IRPEF surcharge adds location-dependent cost (1.23%–3.33%): Italian regions add their own surcharge on IRPEF, varying from 1.23% (Sardinia, Friuli-Venezia Giulia) to 3.33% (most other regions). High-surcharge regions (e.g. Lazio: 3.33%, Campania: 3.33%) add a material layer above the federal rate. The Netherlands applies uniform rates nationally with no regional variation in income tax
  • Bureaucratic complexity: Italian tax compliance is among the EU's most complex — multiple declaration forms (Modello 730 for employees, Modello Redditi for others), INPS contributions split across multiple categories (artigiani, commercianti, gestione separata), and frequent regime changes. The Netherlands' aangifte inkomstenbelasting is complex but has strong digital tooling and an English-language version for expats
  • Employer social security ~30%+: Italy's employer INPS contribution is approximately 23–33% of gross salary (varying by sector, collective agreement, and employment type). This extremely high employer cost — among the EU's highest — constrains gross salary negotiation for Italian-based employees relative to the Netherlands where employer costs are ~20–22% of gross
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Netherlands or Italy cheaper for income taxes?

Under the standard tax system, the Netherlands is cheaper at every income level: €5,450/year at €30,000, €5,800 at €60,000, €7,300 at €90,000, and €7,000 at €150,000. The major exception: Italy's impatriati regime (50% income exclusion for qualifying new residents for 5 years) can make Italy substantially cheaper than the Netherlands for eligible professionals — at €90,000 under impatriati, Italy's total burden drops to approximately €15,000–€17,000 versus the Netherlands' €31,700.

What is Italy's impatriati regime and who qualifies?

Italy's regime dei lavoratori impatriati (Legislative Decree 209/2023 reform) provides a 50% income exclusion on employment and self-employment income for qualifying individuals who: (1) have not been Italian tax residents for the prior 3 tax years; (2) commit to residing in Italy for at least 2 years; (3) carry out their work activity predominantly in Italy. Duration: 5 years, extendable by 5 years if the individual buys property in Italy or has a minor child. The exclusion applies to IRPEF, regional, and municipal taxes — but not INPS contributions. For a €90,000 earner: taxable income = €45,000, producing IRPEF of approximately €10,560 — making Italy far cheaper than the Netherlands for eligible arrivals.

What is Italy's forfettario flat-rate regime for freelancers and self-employed?

Italy's regime forfettario is available to self-employed workers and sole traders earning under €85,000/year. It replaces standard IRPEF with a flat 15% tax on a percentage of gross revenue (the coefficient varies by sector — typically 67%–86% of revenue is the taxable base). New business first 5 years: reduced 5% rate. VAT: exempt. Bookkeeping: simplified. For a €60,000 freelancer under forfettario: taxable base ≈ €42,000 (at 70% coefficient); tax ≈ €6,300 at 15% — dramatically lower than both the standard Italian rate (€22,100) and the Netherlands (€16,300). The forfettario provides a major competitive advantage for independent contractors.

How does Italy's INPS compare to Dutch national insurance contributions?

Italy's INPS (Istituto Nazionale della Previdenza Sociale) employee contribution is approximately 9.49% of gross salary for most employed workers (lavoratori dipendenti), applied up to an annual ceiling of approximately €50,000. Above the ceiling: a reduced rate applies. The Netherlands: national insurance contributions are embedded within the 36.97% Box 1 rate for income up to €38,441 (~17.9% is the NI component). For a €60,000 Italian earner: INPS = ~€4,745 (at ceiling). For a Dutch earner at €60,000: NI within Box 1 is approximately €6,900. The Netherlands' embedded structure makes direct comparison difficult — but the total Dutch burden at €60,000 is still lower despite the higher NI component.

How do capital gains taxes compare between the Netherlands and Italy?

Italy: listed share capital gains taxed at 26% flat sostitutiva (imposta sostitutiva) — applied at the broker level. Primary residence: fully exempt. Crypto assets (from 2023): 26% flat on gains above €2,000 threshold. Netherlands Box 3: actual returns on investment assets above ~€57,000 taxed at 36% (reformed system). Primary residence: exempt from Box 3. For a €50,000 listed share gain: Italy charges €13,000 flat; Netherlands under Box 3 charges 36% of actual returns — at 7% return on €100,000 invested that's ~€2,520/year. The Netherlands' Box 3 is lower for typical portfolio returns; Italy's 26% is lower for large one-off gains.

How does the Dutch 30% ruling compare to Italy's impatriati regime for incoming expats?

Netherlands 30% ruling: 30% of salary excluded from income tax; up to 5 years; available to employees recruited from abroad with scarce expertise; capped at €233,000 salary; employer must apply on behalf of the employee. Italy impatriati: 50% income excluded from IRPEF/surcharges; up to 5 years (extendable to 10 with property purchase or child); available to employees and self-employed; no cap on salary; individual applies independently. At €90,000: Netherlands under 30% ruling reduces Dutch tax to ~€23,000; Italy under impatriati reduces Italian tax to ~€15,000–€17,000. Italy's impatriati provides a higher absolute exclusion percentage and is available to self-employed workers — making it more powerful than the Dutch ruling at equivalent income levels.

Is Amsterdam or Milan more expensive to live in?

Amsterdam and Milan have broadly similar overall cost of living, with Amsterdam slightly more expensive in most categories. Numbeo data shows Amsterdam's cost of living is approximately 10–20% higher than Milan. Rent: central Amsterdam 1-bed €1,800–€2,800/month; central Milan €1,500–€2,500/month. Groceries: Amsterdam approximately 15–25% more expensive. Restaurants: broadly comparable. At €90,000 under the standard tax system: Netherlands saves €7,300/year in income tax. For standard-system earners: the income tax saving largely offset Amsterdam's modestly higher cost of living. For impatriati-eligible earners in Italy: the income tax advantage reverses, making Italy materially cheaper in total cost.