Slovenia Income Tax 2026: Dohodnina Brackets, 22.1% Social Contributions, and Net Pay
June 2026 · 8 min read
Slovenia has the highest employee social contribution rate in the European Union at 22.1%, which significantly reduces take-home pay before income tax is even applied. The income tax itself is progressive, rising from 16% to a top rate of 50% for very high earners. Despite this, Slovenia has a productive and educated workforce and is one of the most prosperous former Yugoslav states. This guide breaks down the full system for 2026.
Income tax brackets: 16% to 50%
Slovenian income tax (dohodnina) has five brackets:
| Annual taxable income | Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to €9,403 | 16% |
| €9,403 to €23,491 | 26% |
| €23,491 to €69,926 | 33% |
| €69,926 to €250,000 | 39% |
| Above €250,000 | 50% |
Taxable income is calculated as gross salary minus social contributions minus the general tax relief (splošna olajšava) of approximately €4,500.
Employee social contributions: 22.1%
| Contribution (zavarovanje) | Rate |
|---|---|
| Pension and disability (PIZ) | 15.5% |
| Health insurance (ZZ) | 6.36% |
| Unemployment (ZAP) | 0.14% |
| Parental care (ZPIZ2) | 0.10% |
| Total employee SS | 22.1% |
Net salary examples for 2026
| Gross (annual) | Employee SS (22.1%) | Income tax | Net salary |
|---|---|---|---|
| €20,000 | €4,420 | €2,110 | €13,470 |
| €30,000 | €6,630 | €5,040 | €18,330 |
| €50,000 | €11,050 | €10,800 | €28,150 |
The high social contribution rate in context
Slovenia's 22.1% employee SS rate is the highest in the EU. By comparison, Estonia is around 3.6%, Germany around 20%, and France around 22% but with a broader contribution base. Employers also contribute approximately 16.1% on top. The total labor cost wedge in Slovenia is therefore substantial.
Use the GrossToNet Slovenia calculator to calculate your net salary for 2026.