Compare taxes and see how much you save moving from Romania to Germany
Germany hosts the largest Romanian diaspora in Western Europe — approximately 700,000–800,000 Romanian nationals (estimates vary, with some sources suggesting up to 900,000 including undercounted seasonal workers) making Romanians one of the largest EU migrant groups in Germany. Romanian migration to Germany accelerated following Romania's EU accession (2007) and the full lifting of labor market restrictions (2014). Romanians in Germany are concentrated in construction, manufacturing, agriculture, healthcare (nursing), and logistics. Romania-Germany remittances flow in both directions: Romanians in Germany send EUR to Romania (EUR/RON historically stable: RON is managed within the ERM II target — Romania aims for Eurozone accession); some German retirees and remote workers have moved to lower-cost Romania. The Romania-Germany comparison is particularly interesting because Romania has the lowest nominal income tax rate in the EU (10% flat) but high social contributions effectively make the total burden comparable to many higher-rate countries.
Flat 10% Income Tax + High Social Contributions
Romania has a flat 10% income tax rate on all taxable income (employee wages, self-employment, dividends, rental income). However, employee social contributions are substantial: CAS (pension contribution) 25% + CASS (health) 10% = 35% of gross salary borne by the employee. These social contributions are paid on gross salary before the 10% income tax. Employer contributions add approximately 2.25% (work insurance and holiday fund). Effective total deduction from gross salary: approximately 42–43%. Self-employed/microenterprise (SRL with turnover below EUR 500,000) may be taxed at 1% of turnover (if 1+ employee) or 3% (no employees) — Romania's microenterprise tax regime offers a very low alternative to the standard 10% rate.
Progressive ESt + Solidarity + Church + Social
Germany taxes residents at progressive rates: 14–42% on income above the basic allowance (€11,604 in 2024); 45% 'rich tax' above €277,826. Solidarity surcharge (SolZ): largely eliminated for most taxpayers since 2021 (applies only above ~€62,801 income). Church tax (Kirchensteuer): 8–9% of income tax for registered church members. Employee social contributions: pension 9.3% + unemployment 1.3% + health ~7.3% + nursing care 1.7% = approximately 19.6% employee total (contribution ceilings apply). Germany taxes residents on worldwide income. Romania-Germany double taxation treaty (1977, updated) prevents double taxation.
At EUR 35,000 annual (Munich/Frankfurt) income:
The Romania-Germany comparison involves both significant wage differentials AND Romania's unusual tax structure: the 10% flat income tax sounds very low, but 35% employee social contributions (pension 25% + health 10%) bring the total employee tax and social burden to approximately 42–43% of gross wages. In Germany, the combined income tax + social contributions at median income is approximately 35–40% of gross. Romania's nominal rate advantage disappears when social contributions are included. The real advantage of Germany is wage access: EUR wages 3–5× Romania equivalents, with EUR/RON relative stability (Romania's EUR-pegged RON management).
| Income | RO Tax | DE Tax | Savings | 10-Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EUR 28,000 (DE) | ~42% RO (10% tax + 35% social) | ~35% DE (income tax + social) | Germany actually LOWER total burden at low-middle incomes due to social contribution ceiling differences | German pension accrual in EUR; Romanian pension (CAS) accrues in RON — EUR stable vs RON over time |
| EUR 55,000 (DE) | ~43% RO | ~46% DE (higher rate bracket approaches) | Romania marginally lower total burden at upper-middle incomes | Germany Riester pension and employer contributions; Romania mandatory CAS pension contribution |
| EUR 90,000 (DE) | ~43% RO (social contributions cap reduces %) | ~52% DE (42% bracket + social) | Romania 9% lower at high incomes — but German wages still higher in absolute terms | German high earners benefit from contribution ceilings on social payments; Romania CAS/CASS capped above EUR 24K |
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Remote Work and Cross-Border Employment →Romania's microenterprise regime is one of the most favorable business tax structures in the EU. An SRL (limited company) with annual turnover below RON 2,500,000 (approximately EUR 500,000) and at least one employee pays 1% of turnover as tax — not 10% on profit. For a profitable small business with EUR 200,000 revenue and EUR 150,000 profit, the Romanian microenterprise tax is EUR 2,000 (1% of turnover) vs EUR 15,000 (10% of profit) under the standard rate. German comparison: German freelancers (Freiberufler) and self-employed pay the standard progressive income tax (up to 42%) plus trade tax (Gewerbesteuer, approximately 14–17% on profits) if operating as a business. A German freelancer earning EUR 80,000 net profit pays approximately EUR 28,000–35,000 in income and trade taxes. The Romanian microenterprise structure is dramatically more favorable — a key reason why German-based professionals consider operating through Romanian SRLs (though tax residency rules and permanent establishment concepts must be carefully managed).
Romania-EU residency rules: if a Romanian national has established their primary residence (tax domicile) in Germany and is a German tax resident, they are taxed in Germany on their worldwide income — not in Romania. Romania taxes individuals based on residency: a Romanian domiciled in Germany is a German tax resident and pays Romanian tax only on Romanian-source income (Romanian property rental, Romanian business income). German wages earned by a German tax resident are taxed only in Germany under the Romania-Germany Double Taxation Agreement (DTA). Romanians who commute seasonally or maintain dual residency may face more complex situations. The general rule: if you live and work primarily in Germany (primary home, 183+ days per year), you are a German tax resident and pay German tax on your income. Romanian income (if any) is reported in Germany and the Foreign Tax Credit prevents double taxation.
Romania has attracted a modest but growing number of German and other Western European remote workers and early retirees, particularly in Transylvania (Brasov, Cluj-Napoca, Sibiu — known as the 'Saxon towns' with historical German heritage) and Bucharest. The financial case: Bucharest rent for a 2-bedroom apartment: approximately EUR 500–700/month vs Munich EUR 1,800–2,500/month. Lower food, transport, and utility costs further reduce living expenses. German retirees receiving a German pension in EUR see their purchasing power roughly double in Romania. Tax considerations: a German retiree living in Romania may remain a German tax resident (paying German pension tax) unless they formally establish Romanian tax residency. Romania does not have a special low-tax regime for foreign retirees equivalent to Portugal's NHR or Greece's 7% flat rate — but Romania's standard 10% rate applies to worldwide income for Romanian tax residents, which can be favorable for retirees with large foreign pensions.