Home/Compare/France vs United Kingdom · $100,000#CMP-59338
ParametersFromFranceToUnited KingdomGross$100,000FilingSinglePeriodFY 2026
Residency model
Edit parameters →
§ 01 · The verdict

United Kingdom leaves you with $16,515 more per year — a 30.4% net advantage over France 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
+$16,515
in favour of United Kingdom
Monthly
+$1,376
Over 5 yrs
+$82,576
Rate gap
16.5 pp
Confidence
High

Both France and United Kingdom operate on a worldwide-income basis, though each country's bracket structure and available regimes produce materially different outcomes. Top statutory rates are close — France at 45% vs United Kingdom at 45% — so the outcome turns on bracket structure, social charges, and available regimes rather than the headline rate alone. France uses a fixed 183-day threshold for residency; United Kingdom relies on a multi-factor test with no single day-count trigger.

FR·ParisEUR → USD @ 1.0870

France

Standard tax (no special regime)
Effective tax rate
45.7%
on $100,000 gross
Net take-home
$54,300
$4,525 / month
Statutory deductionsUSD
Personal income tax
progressive · top 45%
$23,700
Social security
22.0% employee · uncapped
$22,000
Total deductions$45,700
Gross income$100,000
Net take-home$54,300
GB·LondonGBP → USD @ 1.2658

United Kingdom

Standard tax (no special regime)
Effective tax rate
29.2%
on $100,000 gross
Net take-home
$70,815
$5,901 / month
Statutory deductionsUSD
Personal income tax
progressive · top 45%
$24,091
Social security
8.0% employee · capped
$5,094
Total deductions$29,185
Gross income$100,000
Net take-home$70,815
§ 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.
France45.7% effective
$0 → $100,000
PIT · $23,700
Social · $22,000
NET · $54,300
United Kingdom29.2% effective
$0 → $100,000
PIT · $24,091
NET · $70,815
Income tax (PIT)Social chargeNet take-home
Δ net+$16,515·30.4% advantage UN
Who saves more

On a $100k single-resident employment profile under each country's default schedule, United Kingdom produces the lower effective burden at 29.2% versus 45.7% in France — a 16.5 percentage-point gap that compounds to roughly $16,515 of additional take-home annually. France's uncapped social-security charge lifts its effective burden above what the bracket schedule alone would imply; United Kingdom's contributions are capped, so high earners there pay a lower marginal social rate on income above the cap. Social-security contributions also differ: France charges 22.0% versus 8.0% in United Kingdom, 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
InstrumentFrance · USDUnited Kingdom · USDΔ (GB − FR)
I. Personal income tax
Personal income tax
FRprogressive · top 45%GBprogressive · top 45%
$23,700$24,091+$391
subtotal · personal income tax$23,700$24,091+$391
II. Mandatory social security & health
CSG/CRDS 9.7% employment + employee social; total deductions 22-25%. Midpoint used.
FR22.0% · uncappedGB
$22,000−$22,000
NI Class 1: 8% on £242-£967/wk; 2% above (cap modeled at primary upper earnings limit).
FRGB8.0% · capped £50,300
$5,094+$5,094
subtotal · mandatory social security & health$22,000$5,094−$16,906
Total deductions$45,700$29,185−$16,515
Effective rate45.7%29.2%-16.5 pp
Gross income$100,000$100,000
Net take-home$54,300$70,815+$16,515
Table 1 · Statutory deductions, single-filer remote worker, FY2026 indicative. All amounts in USD. n/a where instrument does not apply.
Special regimes

Both countries offer dedicated regimes for incoming professionals: France's Régime des Impatriés (Art 155B) (30% flat) and United Kingdom's FIG (Foreign Income and Gains). France's regime runs for 8 years versus 4 in United Kingdom — a longer runway worth factoring into a multi-year relocation plan.

Bottom line for digital nomads

For a digital nomad or remote worker on a $100k income, United Kingdom edges France by 16.5 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 ↗
France · source instruments
  • Personal income tax code · brackets 2026
  • Social-insurance contribution schedule 2026
  • Régime des Impatriés (Art 155B) · Not French tax resident in prior 5 years; recruited from ab…
United Kingdom · source instruments
  • Personal income tax code · brackets 2026
  • Social-insurance contribution schedule 2026
  • FIG (Foreign Income and Gains) · New 4-year regime for arrivals from April 2025 (non-dom reg…
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 19:51:23 GMT
Engine v0.1.0
Confidence · High (FR), Verify (GB)
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.