Netherlands
| Personal income tax progressive · top 50% | $34,123 |
| Social security no statutory contribution | — |
| Total deductions | $34,123 |
| Gross income | $100,000 |
| Net take-home | $65,877 |
Most of the gap is opened by United States's Foreign Earned Income Exclusion regime, which displaces the standard schedule. Both countries are indicated in USD at the displayed FX.
Netherlands taxes residents on worldwide income, while United States taxes its citizens on worldwide income regardless of residence — a structural difference that shapes how each country treats foreign-source income. Netherlands's top marginal rate of 50% is 13 percentage points above United States's 37%, making the statutory gap one of the largest variables in this comparison.
| Personal income tax progressive · top 50% | $34,123 |
| Social security no statutory contribution | — |
| Total deductions | $34,123 |
| Gross income | $100,000 |
| Net take-home | $65,877 |
| Personal income tax feie · 0% flat | — |
| Social security 22.9% employee · capped | $7,650 |
| Total deductions | $7,650 |
| Gross income | $100,000 |
| Net take-home | $92,350 |
On a $100k single-resident employment profile under each country's default schedule, United States produces the lower effective burden at 24.4% versus 34.1% in Netherlands — a 9.8 percentage-point gap that compounds to roughly $9,761 of additional take-home annually. The 13-point spread in top statutory rates is the primary driver; above their respective thresholds, each additional dollar is taxed at 50% in Netherlands but only 37% in United States. United States levies a social-security contribution on employment income; Netherlands does not model one in the engine, so the bracket comparison here is relatively clean for Netherlands. 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 | Netherlands · USD | United States · USD | Δ (US − NL) |
|---|---|---|---|
I. Personal income tax | |||
Personal income tax NLprogressive · top 50%USfeie · 0% flat | $34,123 | — | −$34,123 |
| subtotal · personal income tax | $34,123 | $0 | −$34,123 |
II. Mandatory social security & health | |||
FICA 6.2% SS (cap $184,500) + 1.45% Medicare (uncapped). Additional 0.9% Medicare above $200k not modeled. NL—US7.6% · capped $184,500 | — | $7,650 | +$7,650 |
SECA: both employer + employee portions paid by SE. NL—US15.3% · capped $184,500 | — | — | — |
| subtotal · mandatory social security & health | $0 | $7,650 | +$7,650 |
| Total deductions | $34,123 | $7,650 | −$26,473 |
| Effective rate | 34.1% | 7.6% | -26.5 pp |
| Gross income | $100,000 | $100,000 | — |
| Net take-home | $65,877 | $92,350 | +$26,473 |
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: Netherlands's 30% Ruling (Expat Scheme) (30% flat) and United States's Foreign Earned Income Exclusion (0% flat). On headline rate alone, United States's Foreign Earned Income Exclusion at 0% beats the alternative at 30% — a 30-point advantage before eligibility is considered.
For a digital nomad or remote worker on a $100k income, United States edges Netherlands by 9.8 percentage points on the default schedule — a real but not overwhelming difference that other variables may offset. Netherlands taxes residents on worldwide income, so the headline effective rate applies to total global earnings — not just locally-sourced pay.
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