Home/Compare/Germany vs Mexico · $100,000#CMP-60207
ParametersFromGermanyToMexicoGross$100,000FilingSinglePeriodFY 2026
Residency model
Edit parameters →
§ 01 · The verdict

Mexico leaves you with $12,621 more per year — a 22.1% net advantage over Germany on a $100,000 gross.

The gap is driven by the headline tax structure — no special regime applied. Both countries are indicated in USD at the displayed FX.

Net delta · annual
+$12,621
in favour of Mexico
Monthly
+$1,052
Over 5 yrs
+$63,106
Rate gap
12.6 pp
Confidence
High

Both Germany and Mexico operate on a worldwide-income basis, though each country's bracket structure and available regimes produce materially different outcomes. Germany's top marginal rate of 45% is 10 percentage points above Mexico's 35%, making the statutory gap one of the largest variables in this comparison.

DE·BerlinEUR → USD @ 1.0870

Germany

Standard tax (no special regime)
Effective tax rate
43.0%
on $100,000 gross
Net take-home
$57,008
$4,751 / month
Statutory deductionsUSD
Personal income tax
progressive · top 45%
$27,829
Social security
20.0% employee · capped
$15,163
Total deductions$42,992
Gross income$100,000
Net take-home$57,008
MX·Mexico CityMXN → USD @ 0.0513

Mexico

Standard tax (no special regime)
Effective tax rate
30.4%
on $100,000 gross
Net take-home
$69,629
$5,802 / month
Statutory deductionsUSD
Personal income tax
progressive · top 35%
$26,271
Social security
4.1% employee · uncapped
$4,100
Total deductions$30,371
Gross income$100,000
Net take-home$69,629
§ 02 · Where the paycheck goes

Flow of $100,000.

Width of each segment is its share of gross. NET segment is what crosses the finish line into the user's account.
Germany43.0% effective
$0 → $100,000
PIT · $27,829
Social · $15,163
NET · $57,008
Mexico30.4% effective
$0 → $100,000
PIT · $26,271
NET · $69,629
Income tax (PIT)Social chargeNet take-home
Δ net+$12,621·22.1% advantage ME
Who saves more

On a $100k single-resident employment profile under each country's default schedule, Mexico produces the lower effective burden at 30.4% versus 43.0% in Germany — a 12.6 percentage-point gap that compounds to roughly $12,621 of additional take-home annually. The 10-point spread in top statutory rates is the primary driver; above their respective thresholds, each additional dollar is taxed at 45% in Germany but only 35% in Mexico. Social-security contributions also differ: Germany charges 20.0% versus 4.1% in Mexico, adding a second layer to the effective-rate spread that doesn't show in the income-tax brackets alone. 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.

§ 03 · Full ledger

Line-item reconciliation.

All amounts USD · FY2026
InstrumentGermany · USDMexico · USDΔ (MX − DE)
I. Personal income tax
Personal income tax
DEprogressive · top 45%MXprogressive · top 35%
$27,829$26,271−$1,558
subtotal · personal income tax$27,829$26,271−$1,558
II. Mandatory social security & health
~20% of gross (pension 9.3% + health ~8.55% + care 1.7-2.3% + unemployment 1.3%). Health/care cap €69,750 (binding upper).
DE20.0% · capped €69,750MX
$15,163−$15,163
IMSS + AFORE ~4.1%.
DEMX4.1% · uncapped
$4,100+$4,100
subtotal · mandatory social security & health$15,163$4,100−$11,063
Total deductions$42,992$30,371−$12,621
Effective rate43.0%30.4%-12.6 pp
Gross income$100,000$100,000
Net take-home$57,008$69,629+$12,621
Table 1 · Statutory deductions, single-filer remote worker, FY2026 indicative. All amounts in USD. n/a where instrument does not apply.
Special regimes

Mexico offers the RESICO (Simplified Regime) (flat 2% on qualifying income) for qualifying incoming residents; Germany has no equivalent ICP-targeted regime currently modelled — new residents there enter the standard Germany schedule immediately. For movers who don't qualify for Mexico's RESICO (Simplified Regime), both countries revert to their default progressive schedules, where Germany's lower top rate still gives it a structural edge.

Bottom line for digital nomads

For a digital nomad or remote worker on a $100k income, Mexico edges Germany by 12.6 percentage points on the default schedule — a real but not overwhelming difference that other variables may offset.

§ 05 · Methodology & sources

How this comparison was built.

Every line above can be traced to a primary instrument. We publish the model; you may toggle its parameters.

Read the full note ↗
Germany · source instruments
  • Personal income tax code · brackets 2026
  • Social-insurance contribution schedule 2026
  • No special regimes recorded for this jurisdiction.
Mexico · source instruments
  • Personal income tax code · brackets 2026
  • Social-insurance contribution schedule 2026
  • RESICO (Simplified Regime) · Self-employed individuals with revenue ≤ MXN 3.5M; national…
Model assumptions
  • 01.Single filer, no dependents. Joint and head-of-household calculations not yet modeled.
  • 02.Income treated as employment, not self-employed unless explicitly set.
  • 03.Special regimes assumed eligible where the headline criteria fit; otherwise the standard schedule applies.
  • 04.FX held constant at the displayed static rate across the period.
  • 05.No equity, RSU, capital gains, or carried interest.
  • 06.No treaty offsets applied — see HOME model for the US-resident case.
  • 07.Filing status assumed Single. Joint and head-of-household calculations not yet modeled.
  • 08.Tax year 2026 with 2025 transitional rates where applicable.
Last refreshed · Sun, 05 Jul 2026 19:45:20 GMT
Engine v0.1.0
Confidence · High (DE), High (MX)
Disclaimer — Comparely publishes modelled estimates for informational purposes and does not constitute legal, tax, accounting, or immigration advice. Statutory rates, social-charge ceilings, FX, and elective regimes change. Eligibility for any special regime is subject to qualifying conditions beyond income alone. Consult a qualified adviser before acting on any figure displayed.