Slovenia tax wedge & take-home pay
Europe · OECD Taxing Wages, 2023 data · High wedge
In Slovenia, the total tax wedge on a single average worker is 43.3% of total labour cost (ranked #7 of 38 OECD countries) — 8.5 points above the OECD average of 34.9%. That wedge is made of income tax 12.1% of gross, employee social security 22.1% of gross and employer social security 16.1% of labour cost. The worker keeps a net 65.8% of gross pay as take-home. These are modelled OECD averages for a representative worker, not your personal tax.
Source: OECD Taxing Wages. Data as of June 2026 (OECD Taxing Wages, 2023 data year).
How Slovenia's labour cost splits
For every unit an employer in Slovenia spends on an average single worker, this is roughly where it goes — net pay versus the three components of the wedge:
- Net take-home pay: 54.4%
- Income tax: 10.4%
- Employee social security: 19%
- Employer social security: 16.1%
- Net take-home pay: 61%
- Income tax: 3.9%
- Employee social security: 19%
- Employer social security: 16.1%
Income tax and employee contributions are reported by the OECD as a share of gross wage; we rescale them onto total labour cost so the four segments sum to 100%. Source: OECD Taxing Wages, 2023 data.
Slovenia tax wedge at a glance
| Measure | Single, no kids | 1-earner, 2 kids |
|---|---|---|
| Total tax wedge | 43.3% | 29.5% |
| Personal income tax (of gross) | 12.1% | 4.5% |
| Employee social security (of gross) | 22.1% | 22.1% |
| Employer social security (of labour cost) | 16.1% | 16.1% |
| Net personal average tax rate | 34.2% | 18.2% |
| Gross labour cost (USD PPP) | $52,785 | $52,785 |
| Gross earnings (USD PPP) | $45,465 | $45,465 |
| Net take-home (USD PPP) | $29,918 | $37,211 |
Source: OECD Taxing Wages. Data as of June 2026 (OECD Taxing Wages, 2023 data year).
Modelled figures for a worker at 100% of the country average wage, from OECD Taxing Wages (2023 data year, CC BY 4.0). USD PPP figures are purchasing-power-parity adjusted so they are roughly comparable across countries. Not personal tax advice — verify on the source.
What the Slovenia tax wedge means
The tax wedge answers a simple question: of everything it costs to employ an average worker in Slovenia, how much never reaches the worker because it goes to income tax and social-security contributions? Here that share is 43.3%, which reads as an above-average labour-tax burden. Crucially, it includes employer social-security contributions (16.1% of labour cost) that don't show up on a payslip — so the headline burden is larger than the "net tax rate" a worker sees (34.2% of gross). For a one-earner family with two children the wedge falls to 29.5% once child-related benefits and reliefs are counted.
How Slovenia ranks in the OECD
| Measure (single worker) | Slovenia | Rank (1 = highest) |
|---|---|---|
| Total tax wedge | 43.3% | #7 of 38 |
| Employer social security | 16.1% | #18 of 38 |
| OECD average wedge | 34.9% | — |
Countries with a similar tax wedge to Slovenia
| Country | Tax wedge | Employer SSC | Net take-home (USD PPP) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Slovenia (this country) | 43.3% | 16.1% | $29,918 |
| Finland | 43.5% | 21.2% | $44,359 |
| Portugal | 42.3% | 23.8% | $29,328 |
| Sweden | 42.1% | 31.4% | $43,556 |
| Slovak Republic | 41.6% | 29.7% | $22,614 |
| Italy | 45.1% | 31.6% | $38,114 |
Frequently asked questions
What is the tax wedge in Slovenia?
For a single average worker with no children, the total tax wedge in Slovenia is 43.3% of total labour cost (OECD Taxing Wages, 2023 data). That is 8.5 points above the OECD average of 34.9%. It combines income tax (12.1% of gross), employee social security (22.1% of gross) and employer social security (16.1% of labour cost). It is a modelled average, not your personal tax.
How much take-home pay does an average worker keep in Slovenia?
An average single worker in Slovenia keeps about 65.8% of their gross wage as net take-home — a net personal average tax rate of 34.2% (income tax plus employee social-security contributions). In USD PPP terms that is roughly $29,918 net from $45,465 gross. Employer social-security contributions of 16.1% sit on top of the wage and never appear on the payslip.
Does Slovenia have high employer social-security contributions?
Employer social security in Slovenia runs at 16.1% of total labour cost for an average single worker, ranking #18 of 38 OECD countries on that measure. Employer contributions are part of the tax wedge but are invisible on the payslip — they raise the cost of hiring without raising gross pay.
Is the tax wedge lower for families in Slovenia?
Yes — for a one-earner married couple with two children the tax wedge in Slovenia is 29.5%, versus 43.3% for a single worker, because child benefits and family tax reliefs reduce the net burden. The gap (13.8% of labour cost) is one measure of how much a country's tax-benefit system supports families.
Keep exploring
Not tax advice. Figures model a representative average worker at 100% of the country's average wage — not your personal situation. Your actual tax and take-home depend on your income level, brackets, allowances, family status and local rules. Verify with Slovenia's tax authority and a qualified adviser. See our methodology and disclaimer.
Last updated: 2026-06-29