Hungary salary & tax calculators 2026
Gross-to-net salary, self-employed, VAT and hourly calculators for Hungary, tax year 2026 — every figure read from official primary sources.
Calculators
Hungary net salary calculator 2026Work out your take-home pay in Hungary for 2026. The calculator deducts the 18.5% TB social contribution and the 15% flat personal income tax (SZJA), both charged on gross salary. For a single adult with no children this leaves about 66.5% of gross as net pay, at any salary level.Open →Hungary VAT calculator 2026Add VAT to a net amount or remove it from a gross amount. Hungary applies the EU's highest standard rate at 27%, plus reduced rates of 18% and 5%.Open →Hungary self-employed tax calculator 2026Estimate take-home income as a Hungarian sole trader (egyeni vallalkozo) under the atalanyado flat-expense scheme for 2026. A 45% deemed-cost ratio applies, the 15% SZJA income tax is charged only above the tax-free half-minimum-wage band, and TB (18.5%) plus szocho (13%) are due on at least the minimum wage. Enter your annual business revenue (receipts).Open →Hungary hourly ↔ annual salary converter 2026Convert pay between hourly, daily, weekly, monthly and annual, based on your weekly hours.Open →
Tax guides
- How Income Tax Works in Hungary (2026): Flat 15% SZJA and the 66.5% Net RuleHungary 2026 income tax: a flat 15% SZJA charged on gross salary. With the 18.5% social contribution, net pay is about 66.5% of gross for a single adult.
- Social Contributions in Hungary (2026): the 18.5% TB Contribution and 13% SzochoHungary 2026 social contributions: employees pay a single 18.5% TB contribution on gross; employers pay 13% szocho on top. Flat, uncapped, no brackets.
- Self-Employed Tax in Hungary (2026): Atalanyado, the 45% Cost Ratio and KATAHungary 2026 self-employed atalanyado: 45% flat-rate expenses, 15% SZJA above the tax-free band, plus 18.5% TB and 13% szocho on the minimum-wage base.
- How VAT (AFA) Works in Hungary (2026): 27% Standard Rate, 18% and 5% ReducedHungary VAT (AFA) 2026: a 27% standard rate (the highest in the EU), plus reduced rates of 18% and 5%. Registration and 2026 reclassification explained.