Chile
0–40% progressive · Territorial for first 3 years of residency · AFP pension employee 10% · Health 7% · Most stable economy in South America
Chile Tax Facts
— 2026Quick Country Comparison
— at CLP 60,000,000| Country | Take-home | Eff. Rate | vs Chile |
|---|---|---|---|
| | CLP 38,400,000 | ~36% | — |
| | CLP 41,400,000 | ~31% | +CLP 3,000,000 |
| | CLP 37,800,000 | ~37% | −CLP 600,000 |
| | CLP 36,600,000 | ~39% | −CLP 1,800,000 |
Chile: progressive 0–40% + AFP 10% + health 7% = ~17% social. Colombia: progressive 0–39%. Argentina: Ganancias 5–35% + ~17% social. Peru: 8–30%. CLP 60,000,000 ≈ $63,000 at June 2026 rates. Illustrative — not tax advice.
Want your exact figures? Use the full Chile calculator →Comparison Guides
See how Chile's tax system compares to Argentina and other Latin American countries.
Salary Guides
Chile uses the Chilean Peso (CLP). The 3-year territorial period for new residents is a significant planning opportunity — foreign income (remote work, investments, pensions) is not subject to Chilean tax during this period. After 3 years, residents pay tax on worldwide income.
Moving from Chile
Chile offers a Rentista visa (passive income from abroad, min $2,000/month), a Pensionado visa (retirement pension), and professional/work visas. Chile has signed free trade agreements with 65+ countries and has a well-developed legal and financial infrastructure. Santiago offers a modern city lifestyle with relatively low crime vs other Latin American capitals. Chile has no formal digital nomad visa but remote workers frequently use the Rentista category.
Last Updated: June 2026 · Daniel · CountryTaxCalc