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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Netherlands VS COUNTRY B Spain

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

OVERVIEW
The Netherlands and Spain have near-identical top marginal income tax rates — 49.5% in the Netherlands versus 47% in Spain (combined state + regional, standard regime). But for mid-to-high earners the effective burden diverges significantly. The Netherlands applies its 49.5% rate above €78,426, while Spain's combined 47% only kicks in above €300,000 in most regions — meaning the vast majority of earners never reach Spain's top rate. At €90,000, Spain's combined effective rate is substantially lower than the Netherlands'. The Netherlands is more competitive at lower incomes (below approximately €45,000) thanks to its generous general tax credit (€3,115 max) and employment tax credit (€5,685 max), which substantially reduce effective rates. Both countries offer significant expat tax incentives: the Netherlands' 30% ruling (30% of gross salary paid tax-free for qualifying internationally recruited workers, capped at ~€233,000) and Spain's Beckham Law (Ley Beckham: 24% flat rate on Spanish-source income for qualifying expats for 6 years). At €100,000 gross salary under the Beckham Law, Spain wins decisively. The 30% ruling remains competitive for higher earners near the WNT cap.
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
49.5%
Top Income Tax Rate
Box 1 top rate; 35.75% bracket 1 includes national insurance
🇪🇸
COUNTRY B
Spain
TAX RATE
47%
Top Combined Rate
State + regional combined; Beckham Law 24% for qualifying expats
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from SpainNetherlands at €90,000
€5,200
That's €433/month 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
🇪🇸 ES TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
€30,000
€2,750
€5,300
€2,550 cheaper in NL
€25,500
€60,000
€16,300
€15,600
€700 cheaper in ES
€7,000
€90,000
€31,700
€26,500
€5,200 cheaper in ES
€52,000
€150,000
€64,200
€54,500
€9,700 cheaper in ES
€97,000
💡

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🇳🇱

Netherlands Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • 30% ruling: up to 30% of gross salary paid tax-free for qualifying expat workers — cap ~€233,000 gross; scaling to 27% from 2027. Duration: 5 years
  • Low effective rate at moderate incomes: general credit (€3,115) + employment credit (€5,685) cut effective rates substantially below €45,000
  • No wealth tax: the Netherlands has no annual net wealth tax on personal assets; Spain charges 0.2%–3.5% on net wealth above regional exemptions
  • Box 3 investment income: €59,357 per person exempt; deemed return system — actual gains not tracked annually
− CONS
  • 49.5% top rate kicks in above €78,426 — very low threshold; earners above €80,000 face near-top-rate tax much earlier than in Spain
  • Tax credits phase out sharply: employment credit phases out above €45,592 and general credit above €24,812 — effective marginal rate spikes in the €50,000–€80,000 range
  • ZVW healthcare contribution: 6.10% employer contribution on wages up to €79,409 — real labour cost above the Box 1 rate
  • 30% ruling limited to 5 years (scaling to 27% from 2027) and requires active employment — self-employed cannot use it
🇪🇸

Spain Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • Beckham Law (Ley Beckham): 24% flat rate on Spanish-source employment income for qualifying expats for 6 years — dramatically lower than standard combined 37%–47% at mid-to-high incomes
  • Top combined rate (47%) only applies above €300,000 in most regions: Madrid's top combined rate is ~45%. The majority of earners never reach Spain's highest bracket
  • Madrid region: lowest regional tax rates in Spain — combined top rate ~45%, wealth tax effectively zero (100% wealth tax rebate in Madrid). Ideal for high earners
  • Lower combined rate at €60,000–€200,000: Spain's 37%–45% effective combined range is meaningfully lower than NL's 49.5% bracket for mid-to-upper earners
− CONS
  • Standard regime worse at lower incomes: Spain has no equivalent to Dutch general/employment tax credits — earners below €45,000 pay more combined income tax than in the Netherlands
  • Employee social security: ~6.35% employee SS contribution is separate from income tax and comes on top of the combined IRPF bill (employer pays ~29.9%)
  • Regional variation: Spain's combined income tax rate varies by autonomous community — Catalonia has higher rates than Madrid; choose your region carefully
  • Wealth tax: outside Madrid, Spain's impuesto sobre el patrimonio applies from €700,000 net wealth (varies by region); rates 0.2%–3.5%. Netherlands has no equivalent annual wealth tax
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is it cheaper to live in the Netherlands or Spain for income taxes?

It depends on income level and eligibility. Below €45,000: the Netherlands is cheaper — its general and employment tax credits (up to €8,800 combined) substantially cut the effective rate. Above €60,000 on standard rates: Spain wins. The Netherlands' 49.5% top rate kicks in above €78,426; Spain's combined top rate of 47% only applies above €300,000. At €90,000, Spanish residents pay approximately €5,200 less in income tax per year. With Spain's Beckham Law (24% flat), Spain wins decisively at all income levels above €50,000. Note: Spain also charges ~6.35% employee social security separately — add that to the income tax comparison.

How does the Dutch 30% ruling compare to Spain's Beckham Law?

Both are expat tax incentives but they work differently. Dutch 30% ruling: 30% of gross salary is paid as a tax-free allowance (scaling to 27% from 2027), capped at the WNT norm (~€233,000 gross). Duration: 5 years. Employees only — not available to self-employed. Spain's Beckham Law: 24% flat rate on all Spanish-source employment income. Duration: 6 years. Available to employees transferring to Spain with an employment contract. For a €100,000 salary: 30% ruling saves roughly €15,000–€18,000/year vs standard Dutch tax. Beckham Law at 24% saves approximately €13,000–€17,000 vs Spanish standard combined tax. Beckham has the edge for longer residency (6 vs 5 years); 30% ruling wins for very high earners near the €233,000 cap.

Can I use Spain's Beckham Law if I move from the Netherlands?

Yes, provided you meet the eligibility requirements. You must: (1) become a Spanish tax resident, (2) not have been a Spanish tax resident in the previous 5 years, (3) move to Spain due to an employment contract with a Spanish employer (or a posting from a foreign employer to a Spanish entity), (4) the work must be genuinely performed in Spain. Moving from the Netherlands specifically does not disqualify you — the requirement is just prior non-residency. The Beckham Law was broadened in 2023 to include digital nomads and entrepreneurs; self-employed qualifying under those categories may also apply. The flat 24% rate applies to Spanish-source income; foreign-source income (from your Dutch company, for example) may be taxable at different rates. Always confirm eligibility with a Spanish tax adviser before relying on this.

What is Spain's wealth tax and does the Netherlands have one?

Spain has an annual wealth tax (Impuesto sobre el Patrimonio) on net assets above a regional threshold — typically €700,000 per person nationally plus an additional €300,000 housing allowance (varies by region). Rates: 0.2%–3.5% on the net taxable base. The Madrid autonomous community applies a 100% rebate, effectively eliminating wealth tax for Madrid residents. Catalonia and others fully apply it. The Netherlands has no annual wealth tax on personal assets. Dutch Box 3 taxes investment income via a deemed return (36% on estimated return above €59,357 exempt), but this is an income tax mechanism — not a net wealth tax. For high-net-worth individuals moving from the Netherlands: choosing Madrid removes both wealth tax and reduces income tax to ~45% at the top.

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

Netherlands: Capital gains on most assets are not tracked under Box 3 — instead, a deemed return is applied to the net investment portfolio above €59,357. The Box 3 rate is 36% on the deemed return in 2026. Actual gains realised within Box 3 are not taxed separately. Box 2 (5%+ shareholdings): 24.5% on first €68,843 of gains/dividends, 31% above. Spain: Savings base (base del ahorro) — capital gains and investment income taxed at progressive savings rates: 19% (0–€6,000), 21% (€6,001–€50,000), 23% (€50,001–€200,000), 27% (above €200,000). Primary residence exemption: available if proceeds reinvested in a new main home. Under Beckham Law: capital gains from foreign assets are exempt from Spanish tax — a major advantage for expats with significant non-Spanish investment portfolios.

What are the social security contribution differences between the Netherlands and Spain?

Netherlands: National insurance (AOW, ANW, WLZ — 27.65%) is embedded in the Box 1 first bracket rate (35.75% total). There is no separate 'social security' line for employees — it's built into the tax calculation. Healthcare (ZVW): employers pay 6.10% on wages up to €79,409 — this doesn't come out of your take-home directly. Spain: Employees pay ~6.35% social security on gross salary (general contingencies 4.7% + unemployment 1.55% + other ~0.1%). Employers pay ~29.9%. In 2023, Spain introduced MEI (Mecanismo de Equidad Intergeneracional): additional 0.6% split employer/employee — now included in the ~6.35% total. For a €60,000 gross salary in Spain: add ~€3,810 employee SS to the IRPF income tax bill. This makes Spain's actual total burden higher than the income tax figures alone suggest.

Which Spanish region has the lowest income taxes?

Madrid consistently has the lowest regional income tax rates in Spain. The combined state + Madrid regional top rate is approximately 45% (vs 47% in most other regions). Madrid also applies a 100% wealth tax rebate, effectively eliminating the wealth tax for Madrid residents. Andalucía deflated its regional scale in 2022–2023, bringing it closer to Madrid's rates — the combined top rate in Andalucía is now ~44.9%. Catalonia has the highest regional rates: combined top can reach ~50% for high earners. For expats and high earners, Madrid offers the best combination of low income tax + zero effective wealth tax in Spain. This is why Madrid is the destination of choice for high-net-worth Spanish taxpayers who have relocated from other regions.

Can Dutch freelancers move to Spain and use the Beckham Law?

Since Spain's 2023 reforms (Ley de Startups), the Beckham Law was extended to certain self-employed individuals including: entrepreneurs and startup founders who move to Spain to develop qualifying activities, digital nomads and remote workers with a Digital Nomad Visa (DNV), and qualified researchers/scientists. Standard freelancers (autónomos) performing general services do not qualify under the employment route — Beckham requires an employment relationship or approved activity. For Dutch ZZP (freelancers) working remotely for Dutch clients: Spain's Digital Nomad Visa may provide residency, and the extended Beckham Law may apply to the income — but eligibility depends on the nature of the work (must be predominantly for non-Spanish clients). Autónomo social security (39.3% base rate under 2023 quota system) is separate from the Beckham flat rate. Confirm your specific situation with a Spanish gestor or tax adviser.