On a gross salary of $60,000 in New Zealand, your take-home pay after PAYE income tax and ACC earner levy is approximately $47,978/year — or $923/week. Here is the complete breakdown for 2025–26.
On $60,000 gross, your take-home pay is approximately $47,978/year ($3,998/month, $1,845/fortnight, $923/week) after PAYE tax of $11,020 and ACC levy of $1,002. Your effective tax rate is 20.0% and your marginal PAYE rate is 30.0%.
Summary: $60,000 Take-Home Pay (2025–26)
| Gross | Net Take-Home | |
|---|---|---|
| Annual | $60,000 | $47,978 |
| Monthly | $5,000 | $3,998 |
| Fortnightly | $2,308 | $1,845 |
| Weekly | $1,154 | $923 |
Deductions Breakdown
| Deduction | Annual Amount | % of Gross |
|---|---|---|
| PAYE income tax | $11,020 | 18.4% |
| ACC earner levy | $1,002 | 1.7% |
| Total deductions | $12,022 | 20.0% |
| Net take-home | $47,978 | 80.0% |
Effective tax rate: 20.0% (total PAYE + ACC as a percentage of gross) Marginal PAYE rate: 30.0% (the rate applied to each additional dollar earned at this income)
PAYE Tax Bracket Breakdown
NZ income tax is calculated on a marginal basis — you only pay the higher rate on income above each threshold:
| Bracket | Taxable Income | Rate | Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0 – $14,000 | $14,000 | 10.5% | $1,470 |
| $14,001 – $48,000 | $34,000 | 17.5% | $5,950 |
| $48,001 – $70,000 | $12,000 | 30.0% | $3,600 |
| Total PAYE | | | $11,020 |
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 | — | $4,461/year |
| Annual take-home | $47,978 | $43,517 |
| Weekly take-home | $923 | $837 |
Student loan repayments continue until your loan balance reaches zero. You can make extra lump-sum payments to IRD at any time to reduce the balance faster.
KiwiSaver Impact on Take-Home Pay
KiwiSaver contributions are deducted from your gross pay before you receive your wages. The table below shows how each contribution rate affects your take-home pay — and how much your employer adds on top (free money):
| Your Rate | Your Contribution | Employer Adds (3%) | Your Annual Take-Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3% | $1,800/yr | $1,800/yr | $46,178/yr ($888/wk) |
| 4% | $2,400/yr | $1,800/yr | $45,578/yr ($876/wk) |
| 6% | $3,600/yr | $1,800/yr | $44,378/yr ($853/wk) |
| 8% | $4,800/yr | $1,800/yr | $43,178/yr ($830/wk) |
| 10% | $6,000/yr | $1,800/yr | $41,978/yr ($807/wk) |
Minimum contribution to receive the full employer 3% match: 3%. The employer contribution is in addition to your salary, not deducted from it.
Where Does $60,000 Rank in NZ?
A $60,000 salary is the ~52nd percentile among all NZ individual earners — you earn more than roughly 48% of NZ earners.
This comparison includes part-time workers, casual employees, and all earners. Among full-time employees only, the percentile is somewhat lower (meaning more full-time workers earn similar amounts).
See the income percentile calculator for more context.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the take-home pay on $60,000 in NZ?
After PAYE income tax ($11,020) and ACC earner levy ($1,002), your annual take-home is $47,978 — or $923/week, $1,845/fortnight, $3,998/month.
How much PAYE tax do I pay on $60,000 in NZ?
PAYE on $60,000 is $11,020/year, calculated on NZ’s progressive tax brackets. Your effective (average) tax rate is 20.0% and your marginal rate (on each additional dollar) is 30.0%.
What is the ACC levy on $60,000 in NZ?
The ACC earner levy is 1.67% of your income, giving an annual levy of $1,002 on $60,000. The levy applies on income up to $139,892/year.
How much can I borrow for a mortgage on $60,000?
Under the RBNZ DTI 6x rule, the maximum mortgage on $60,000 with no other debt is $360,000. With a 20% deposit of $90,000, you could purchase a property up to $450,000. See the mortgage borrowing guide for 60k for the full repayment table.
Does KiwiSaver affect my take-home pay?
Yes. At the minimum 3% rate, KiwiSaver costs you $1,800/year in reduced take-home. But your employer also adds 3% ($1,800/year) on top — this is effectively free money. The net position is positive even after reduced take-home.