Argentina
| Personal income tax progressive · top 35% | $35,000 |
| Social security no statutory contribution | — |
| Total deductions | $35,000 |
| Gross income | $100,000 |
| Net take-home | $65,000 |
The gap is driven by the headline tax structure — no special regime applied. Both countries are indicated in USD at the displayed FX.
Argentina taxes residents on worldwide income, while Singapore uses a territorial system — only locally-sourced income enters the tax base — a structural difference that shapes how each country treats foreign-source income. Argentina's top marginal rate of 35% is 11 percentage points above Singapore's 24%, making the statutory gap one of the largest variables in this comparison. Singapore uses a fixed 183-day threshold for residency; Argentina relies on a multi-factor test with no single day-count trigger.
| Personal income tax progressive · top 35% | $35,000 |
| Social security no statutory contribution | — |
| Total deductions | $35,000 |
| Gross income | $100,000 |
| Net take-home | $65,000 |
| Personal income tax progressive · top 24% | $7,500 |
| Social security no statutory contribution | — |
| Total deductions | $7,500 |
| Gross income | $100,000 |
| Net take-home | $92,500 |
On a $100k single-resident employment profile under each country's default schedule, Singapore produces the lower effective burden at 7.5% versus 35.0% in Argentina — a 27.5 percentage-point gap that compounds to roughly $27,500 of additional take-home annually. The 11-point spread in top statutory rates is the primary driver; above their respective thresholds, each additional dollar is taxed at 35% in Argentina but only 24% in Singapore. The gap widens at higher incomes as marginal rates diverge further; remote workers earning above $150k or $200k should run the full engine scenario with their actual figures for a more precise read.
| Instrument | Argentina · USD | Singapore · USD | Δ (SG − AR) |
|---|---|---|---|
I. Personal income tax | |||
Personal income tax ARprogressive · top 35%SGprogressive · top 24% | $35,000 | $7,500 | −$27,500 |
| subtotal · personal income tax | $35,000 | $7,500 | −$27,500 |
II. Mandatory social security & health | |||
| No statutory deductions in this bucket for either jurisdiction. | |||
| Total deductions | $35,000 | $7,500 | −$27,500 |
| Effective rate | 35.0% | 7.5% | -27.5 pp |
| Gross income | $100,000 | $100,000 | — |
| Net take-home | $65,000 | $92,500 | +$27,500 |
Table 1 · Statutory deductions, single-filer remote worker, FY2026 indicative. All amounts in USD. n/a where instrument does not apply. | |||
Neither Argentina nor Singapore offers a dedicated special regime for incoming professionals in the Comparely model — both apply their standard schedules to all new residents from day one. Argentina runs a flat 35% rate on all taxable income — simple to model, with no bracket cliff effects at any income level. Singapore runs a 13-bracket progressive schedule with a top rate of 24%; the marginal rate climbs in steps, so the effective burden on a $100k profile stays well below the headline. Without regime optionality, the comparison between these two jurisdictions rests entirely on bracket structure, social-security charges, and cost-of-living — digital nomads who qualify for regimes in other countries may find those alternatives more compelling on a pure tax basis.
For a digital nomad or remote worker on a $100k income, Singapore's effective burden of 7.5% is well below Argentina's 35.0%, making Singapore the arithmetic preference for pure take-home optimisation. Singapore's territorial system means foreign-source income stays off the resident tax base entirely — a structural advantage for nomads paid by overseas clients that no rate comparison fully captures.
Every line above can be traced to a primary instrument. We publish the model; you may toggle its parameters.
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