France
| 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 |
The gap is driven by the headline tax structure — no special regime applied. Both countries are indicated in USD at the displayed FX.
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.
| 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 |
| 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 |
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.
| Instrument | France · USD | United Kingdom · USD | Δ (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). FR—GB8.0% · 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 rate | 45.7% | 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. | |||
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.
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.
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