Here's the take-home pay on a €60,000 salary for a single PAYE employee in 2026 — after income tax, USC, PRSI and the new MyFutureFund pension deduction.
| Item | Per year |
|---|---|
| Gross salary | €60,000 |
| Income tax (PAYE) | − €11,200 |
| USC | − €1,333 |
| PRSI (4.2%) | − €2,520 |
| MyFutureFund (1.5%) | − €900 |
| Take-home pay | €44,047 |
You pay €900/yr, your employer adds €900, and the State tops up €300 — about €2,100 into your pension this year. You only keep the employer + State money if you stay enrolled. By 2035 your contribution rises to 6% (~€3,600/yr).
€16,000 of your income sits in the 40% higher-rate band (everything above €44,000). The first €44,000 is taxed at 20%.
After income tax, USC and PRSI of about €15,053 — an effective rate of roughly 25% — plus the €900 MyFutureFund deduction, your net pay is about €44,047 a year. Opting out of MyFutureFund would leave you with €44,947, but you'd forgo €1,200 in employer and State contributions.
A Central Bank–regulated adviser can review your options free of charge.
A single PAYE employee on €60,000 takes home about €44,047 a year — roughly €3,671 a month or €847 a week in 2026, after income tax, USC, PRSI and the MyFutureFund pension deduction.
At the 2026 starting rate of 1.5% it's about €900 a year (€75 a month). Your employer adds the same, and the State tops up by €300. By 2035 your share rises to 6% — about €3,600 a year.
About €44,947 a year — roughly €75 more a month — but you'd give up the €1,200 a year your employer and the State add to your pension.
Income tax, USC and PRSI come to about €15,053, an effective rate of roughly 25% before pension contributions.
Use the full take-home pay calculator → to add a personal pension %, change your status, or model bonuses.