On a gross salary of $40,000 in New Zealand, your take-home pay after PAYE income tax and ACC earner levy is approximately $33,312/year — or $641/week. Here is the complete breakdown for 2026.
On $40,000 gross, your take-home pay is approximately $33,312/year ($2,776/month, $1,281/fortnight, $641/week) after PAYE tax of $6,020 and ACC levy of $668. Your effective tax rate is 16.7% and your marginal PAYE rate is 17.5%.
Summary: $40,000 Take-Home Pay (2026)
| Gross | Net Take-Home | |
|---|---|---|
| Annual | $40,000 | $33,312 |
| Monthly | $3,333 | $2,776 |
| Fortnightly | $1,538 | $1,281 |
| Weekly | $769 | $641 |
Deductions Breakdown
| Deduction | Annual Amount | % of Gross |
|---|---|---|
| PAYE income tax | $6,020 | 15.1% |
| ACC earner levy | $668 | 1.7% |
| Total deductions | $6,688 | 16.7% |
| Net take-home | $33,312 | 83.3% |
Effective tax rate: 16.7% (total PAYE + ACC as a percentage of gross) Marginal PAYE rate: 17.5% (the rate applied to each additional dollar earned at this income)
PAYE Tax Bracket Breakdown
NZ income tax is calculated on a marginal basis — only the portion above each threshold is taxed at the higher rate:
| Bracket | Taxable Income | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0 – $14,000 | $14,000 | 10.5% | $1,470 |
| $14,001 – $40,000 | $26,000 | 17.5% | $4,550 |
| Total PAYE | $6,020 |
With a Student Loan
If you are repaying a student loan in NZ, an additional 12% is deducted on income above $22,828/year:
| Without Student Loan | With Student Loan | |
|---|---|---|
| Student loan repayment | — | $2,061/year |
| Annual take-home | $33,312 | $31,251 |
| Weekly take-home | $641 | $601 |
Student loan repayment at $40,000: 12% × ($40,000 − $22,828) = 12% × $17,172 = $2,061/year ($40/week).
KiwiSaver Impact on Take-Home Pay
| Your Rate | Your Contribution | Employer Adds (3%) | Your Annual Take-Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3% | $1,200/yr | $1,200/yr | $32,112/yr ($618/wk) |
| 4% | $1,600/yr | $1,200/yr | $31,712/yr ($610/wk) |
| 6% | $2,400/yr | $1,200/yr | $30,912/yr ($594/wk) |
| 8% | $3,200/yr | $1,200/yr | $30,112/yr ($579/wk) |
| 10% | $4,000/yr | $1,200/yr | $29,312/yr ($564/wk) |
Combined: KiwiSaver + Student Loan
| Scenario | Annual Take-Home | Weekly Take-Home |
|---|---|---|
| PAYE + ACC only | $33,312 | $641 |
| + 3% KiwiSaver | $32,112 | $618 |
| + 4% KiwiSaver | $31,712 | $610 |
| + Student loan | $31,251 | $601 |
| + 3% KiwiSaver + student loan | $30,051 | $578 |
Context: $40,000 in NZ
$40,000/year at 40 hours/week works out to $19.23/hour — below the adult minimum wage of $23.50/hour. Full-time minimum wage employment pays $48,880/year in 2026.
At $40,000, you’re earning roughly in the bottom 30% of individual earners in NZ. This salary is common in entry-level retail, hospitality, administration, and care roles. The NZ median is approximately $65,000–$70,000 — $40k is well below that.
What Does Earning $40,000 Look Like in NZ?
At $40,000, you are earning below the equivalent of full-time minimum wage in NZ but above the threshold where the 17.5% income tax bracket applies to a meaningful portion of your income. This level is common for: first and second-year trade apprentices (where government-set training wages or industry agreements apply), healthcare support workers such as healthcare assistants and home support workers, experienced retail and hospitality staff in part-time or team-leader roles, entry-level administration staff, and people who have taken a deliberate pay cut to change careers or enter a new field.
A take-home of around $755 per week is workable in most NZ cities outside Auckland if you are flatting. In smaller regional centres — Whanganui, Gisborne, Invercargill, or Westport — $40,000 provides a little more breathing room, and with disciplined saving, first home buyer goals eventually come into view through the Kāinga Ora First Home Grant. In Auckland and Wellington, flatting remains essential and discretionary spending is limited. The good news is that your income does not yet enter the 30% marginal bracket (which begins at $48,001), so your effective tax rate stays relatively low.
The most powerful financial move at $40,000 is to establish savings habits now, even if the amounts are modest. A KiwiSaver contribution of 3% costs you around $23 per week in reduced take-home, but also generates $23 per week in employer contributions — an immediate 100% return on that money. If you are in a trade apprenticeship, your earning trajectory over the next three to five years is substantial once you complete your qualification. Setting up an automatic savings transfer on payday — even $50 per week into a separate account — builds the discipline and the balance that will matter when your income increases.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the take-home pay on $40,000 in NZ?
After PAYE ($6,020) and ACC ($668), your take-home is $33,312/year — $641/week, $1,281/fortnight, $2,776/month.
How much PAYE tax on $40,000 in NZ?
$6,020: $1,470 at 10.5% (first $14k) plus $4,550 at 17.5% (next $26k). Effective PAYE rate is 15.1%.
How much student loan do I repay on $40,000?
$2,061/year — 12% on the $17,172 above the $22,828 repayment threshold.