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HEAD-TO-HEAD TAX COMPARISON · 2026

COUNTRY A Netherlands VS COUNTRY B Portugal

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

OVERVIEW
Netherlands and Portugal share near-identical top marginal income tax rates — 49.5% in the Netherlands versus 48% in Portugal — but diverge sharply in how they treat expats and mid-to-high earners. The Netherlands offers the 30% ruling: up to 30% of gross salary paid tax-free for qualifying internationally recruited workers, capped at the WNT salary norm (~€233,000). Portugal counters with IFICI (Incentivo Fiscal à Investigação Científica e Inovação), the replacement for NHR: a 20% flat rate on Portuguese-source income for 10 years, available to qualifying expats in technology, science, research, and highly qualified roles who were not Portuguese tax residents in the prior five years. For standard employed residents with no special regime, the Netherlands wins at lower incomes (below approximately €55,000) because its general tax credit (€3,115 max) and employment tax credit (€5,685 max) substantially reduce effective rates. Above €55,000, Portugal's standard IRS produces a lower income tax bill — the Netherlands' 49.5% bracket kicks in above €78,426 versus Portugal's top 48% rate only applying above €86,634. With IFICI, Portugal wins by a wide margin at most income levels above €50,000.
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% in bracket 1 includes national insurance
🇵🇹
COUNTRY B
Portugal
TAX RATE
48%
Top IRS Rate
Standard rate; qualifying expats pay 20% flat under IFICI
TYPICAL ANNUAL DIFFERENCE
Moving from PortugalNetherlands at €90,000
€4,400
That's €367/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
🇵🇹 PT TAX
SAVINGS
10-YEAR
€30,000
€2,750
€4,850
€2,100 cheaper in NL
€21,000
€60,000
€16,300
€15,400
€900 cheaper in PT
€9,000
€90,000
€31,700
€27,300
€4,400 cheaper in PT
€44,000
€150,000
€64,200
€54,000
€10,200 cheaper in PT
€102,000
💡

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🇳🇱

Netherlands Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • 30% ruling: up to 30% of salary paid tax-free for qualifying expat workers — currently capped at ~€233,000 gross; scaling to 27% from 2027
  • Low effective rate at moderate incomes: combined general (€3,115) and employment (€5,685) tax credits cut the burden significantly below €55,000
  • No inheritance tax between spouses and first-degree relatives; Dutch succession planning is simpler than many EU peers
  • Box 3 investment income: €59,357 per person exempt; only deemed returns above that threshold taxed at 36%
− CONS
  • 49.5% top rate kicks in above €78,426 — a relatively low threshold; mid-to-high earners face near-top-rate tax earlier than in Portugal
  • Tax credits phase out sharply above €45,592 (employment) and €24,812 (general) — effective marginal rate spikes for earners in the €50,000–€80,000 range
  • ZVW healthcare contribution: 6.10% up to €79,409 wage base — additional labour cost on top of Box 1 rates
  • Box 3 transition risk: Dutch courts have challenged the Box 3 deemed-return system; legislative uncertainty ongoing
🇵🇹

Portugal Pros & Cons

+ PROS
  • IFICI (NHR 2.0): 20% flat rate on Portuguese-source employment and self-employment income for 10 years for qualifying expats — dramatically lower than standard IRS at mid-to-high incomes
  • Lower effective rate above €55,000 for standard residents: Portugal's 48% top rate only applies above €86,634 vs Netherlands €78,426 — a meaningful €8,000 buffer
  • No wealth tax: Portugal has no annual net wealth or worth tax; NL Box 3 applies even to modest investment portfolios above €59,357
  • Corporate tax reform: flat 20% (first €50,000 at 16% for SMEs) — significantly lower than NL's 25.8% above €200,000
− CONS
  • Standard IRS at lower incomes is worse: Portugal has no equivalent to the Dutch general/employment tax credits — earners below €50,000 pay more income tax under standard IRS than in the Netherlands
  • Social security: 11% employee SS contribution is separate from IRS and comes on top of income tax — combined burden is higher than it appears from income tax figures alone
  • IFICI eligibility is restricted: limited to technology, science, research, and qualified professional roles. General management, finance, or administrative roles often do not qualify
  • Solidarity surcharge: 2.5% extra on income €80,000–€250,000 and 5% above €250,000 — pushes effective top rate to 53% for very high earners
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

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

It depends on income level and eligibility. Below €55,000: the Netherlands is cheaper thanks to its general and employment tax credits. Above €55,000 on standard rates: Portugal is cheaper — its top 48% rate only applies above €86,634 versus the Netherlands' 49.5% above €78,426. At €90,000, Portuguese residents pay approximately €4,400 less in income tax per year. With Portugal's IFICI regime (20% flat for qualifying expats), Portugal wins by a wide margin at virtually all income levels above €50,000. Note: Portugal also charges 11% employee social security on top of income tax, whereas Dutch national insurance (27.65%) is already embedded in the first bracket rate.

How does the Dutch 30% ruling compare to Portugal's IFICI?

Both are expat tax incentives but they work differently. The Dutch 30% ruling: 30% of gross salary is paid tax-free (as a non-taxable allowance), capped at the WNT norm (~€233,000 gross). Duration: 5 years. Available to employees hired from abroad with specific expertise. Scaling to 27% from 2027. Portugal's IFICI (NHR 2.0): 20% flat rate on all Portuguese-source employment income for 10 years. Open to qualifying activities in tech, research, science, and highly qualified roles. Not capped. For a €100,000 salary: 30% ruling saves roughly €15,000–18,000/year in Dutch tax. IFICI at 20% flat saves approximately €17,000–21,000 versus Portuguese standard IRS. IFICI has the edge for longer residency (10 vs 5 years) and for higher earners.

If I move from the Netherlands to Portugal, can I get IFICI?

Yes, provided you meet the eligibility requirements. You must: (1) become a Portuguese tax resident, (2) not have been a Portuguese tax resident in the previous five years, (3) work in a qualifying activity — technology, scientific research, highly qualified roles, or strategic sectors defined annually by the Portuguese government. Moving from the Netherlands specifically does not disqualify you. Note: IFICI replaced NHR on 1 January 2024. If you were an NHR holder, you remain under the original NHR rules for your remaining 10-year period and cannot switch to IFICI. New applicants in 2024 and beyond apply only for IFICI. Always confirm your role qualifies before relying on this tax planning.

Does Portugal still have the NHR tax regime in 2026?

The original NHR (Non-Habitual Resident) regime closed to new applications on 31 March 2025. It has been replaced by IFICI (Incentivo Fiscal à Investigação Científica e Inovação) for new expats from 2024. Existing NHR holders continue under the original NHR rules for the remainder of their 10-year period. IFICI is narrower than NHR — it restricts qualifying activities to technology, science, research, and specific high-value sectors, whereas NHR was broader. Foreign pension income, which was formerly exempt or taxed at 10% under NHR, is no longer covered by IFICI in the same way. Verify your specific situation with a Portuguese tax adviser.

What are the social security differences between the Netherlands and Portugal?

Netherlands: National insurance contributions (27.65%) are embedded in the Box 1 income tax rate for the first bracket (35.75% total). There is no separate employee 'social security' line — it is already accounted for in the bracket calculation. Healthcare: employers pay the ZVW contribution (6.10% on wages up to €79,409) on behalf of employees — it doesn't reduce your take-home directly. Portugal: Employees pay 11% social security on gross salary, separately from income tax. Employers pay 23.75%. The 11% employee SS is a real deduction from your net pay and comes on top of the IRS income tax bill. This means Portugal's total mandatory contributions are higher than income tax figures alone suggest. For a €60,000 gross salary, add €6,600/year in employee SS to Portugal's IRS bill.

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

Netherlands: Most capital gains are not taxed directly. Investment assets are instead taxed via Box 3, which applies a deemed return rate to your net investment portfolio above €59,357. In 2026, the Box 3 rate is 36% on the deemed return. Actual gains or losses within Box 3 are not tracked — only the portfolio value matters. Box 2 (substantial shareholding, 5%+ stake): 24.5% on first €68,843 of dividend/gain, 31% above. Portugal: Capital gains on most assets are taxed at a flat 28%. Property sales: 50% of the gain is included in taxable income for residents (effective rate depends on your IRS bracket). Primary residence exemption: available if you reinvest proceeds into another main home within set timeframes. For equity investors: Portugal's 28% flat CGT is straightforward but higher than NL's Box 3 regime for large portfolios.

What happens to my Dutch pension (AOW) if I move to Portugal?

AOW (Dutch state pension) can be paid to Portuguese residents. The Netherlands-Portugal double tax treaty determines which country has taxing rights. Under the current treaty, AOW and private Dutch pension income paid to Portuguese residents is generally taxable in Portugal (not the Netherlands), unless you are a former Dutch civil servant. For NHR holders receiving Dutch pensions: the original NHR regime often exempted foreign pension income from Portuguese tax; verify whether this applied to your specific situation. For IFICI holders: foreign pension income is generally not covered by IFICI's 20% rate. Portuguese IRS taxes foreign pension at standard progressive rates. Importantly: voluntarily building up Dutch supplementary pension (third-pillar) contributions while working in the Netherlands — and then moving to Portugal — is a recognised planning approach. Take specialist advice before departing.

Can Dutch freelancers and remote workers move to Portugal under IFICI?

It depends on your activity. IFICI covers self-employed income from qualifying activities, not just employment. Technology roles, software development, digital innovation, scientific research, and qualified professional services in strategic sectors can qualify. Generic freelance work (writing, design, general consulting) may not. There is also Portugal's digital nomad visa (D8 visa) for remote workers, which is separate from IFICI — the visa grants residency, but IFICI eligibility then depends on your specific profession. For Dutch freelancers: self-employed persons in Portugal pay SS at a reduced rate of 21.4% (lower than the 23.75% employer rate for employees) on 70% of gross invoicing — a meaningful difference from the NL ZZP social security regime. Confirm qualifying activity status with a Portuguese tax professional before relying on IFICI.