Enter your gross annual income to calculate your New Zealand PAYE income tax for 2025–26. See your tax broken down by bracket, your effective rate, and your marginal rate.
On a $70,000 gross salary, NZ PAYE income tax for 2025–26 is $14,020. On $100,000 it is $23,920. On $150,000 it is $40,420. These are income tax only — ACC earner levy (1.67%) is additional. Use the calculator below for your exact figure.
NZ Income Tax Calculator
NZ Income Tax Brackets 2025–26
New Zealand’s income tax is progressive — each bracket rate applies only to the portion of income within that range:
| Income Bracket | Rate | Tax on Bracket (max) |
|---|---|---|
| $0 – $14,000 | 10.5% | $1,470 |
| $14,001 – $48,000 | 17.5% | $5,950 |
| $48,001 – $70,000 | 30.0% | $6,600 |
| $70,001 – $180,000 | 33.0% | $36,300 |
| $180,001+ | 39.0% | On all income above $180k |
Maximum tax through each threshold:
- At $14,000: $1,470 tax (10.5% effective)
- At $48,000: $7,420 tax (15.5% effective)
- At $70,000: $14,020 tax (20.0% effective)
- At $180,000: $50,320 tax (28.0% effective)
See the full tax brackets guide for more detail.
Quick Tax Reference Table (2025–26)
| Gross Salary | PAYE Tax | ACC Levy | Total Deductions | Net Take-Home | Effective Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $3,570 | $501 | $4,071 | $25,929 | 11.9% |
| $50,000 | $8,020 | $835 | $8,855 | $41,145 | 17.7% |
| $60,000 | $10,520 | $1,002 | $11,522 | $48,478 | 19.2% |
| $70,000 | $14,020 | $1,169 | $15,189 | $54,811 | 21.7% |
| $80,000 | $17,320 | $1,336 | $18,656 | $61,344 | 23.3% |
| $90,000 | $20,620 | $1,503 | $22,123 | $67,877 | 24.6% |
| $100,000 | $23,920 | $1,670 | $25,590 | $74,410 | 25.6% |
| $120,000 | $30,520 | $2,004 | $32,524 | $87,476 | 27.1% |
| $150,000 | $40,420 | $2,336 | $42,756 | $107,244 | 28.5% |
| $180,000 | $50,320 | $2,336 | $52,656 | $127,344 | 29.3% |
| $200,000 | $58,120 | $2,336 | $60,456 | $139,544 | 30.2% |
ACC capped at income of $139,892 ($2,336/year maximum).
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate my income tax in NZ?
Apply each bracket rate to the portion of income within that range. For $80,000: 10.5% × $14,000 = $1,470; plus 17.5% × $34,000 = $5,950; plus 30% × $22,000 = $6,600; plus 33% × $10,000 = $3,300. Total PAYE = $17,320. Add ACC levy of $1,336 for total deductions of $18,656.
What is the difference between effective and marginal tax rate in NZ?
The marginal rate is what you pay on each additional dollar at your income level — for a $80,000 earner, that’s 33%. The effective rate is your total PAYE tax as a percentage of gross income — for a $80,000 earner, that’s 21.7%. The effective rate is always lower than the marginal rate in a progressive system.
Do I need to file a tax return in NZ?
Most NZ employees with a single PAYE job do not need to file an IR3 return — IRD auto-calculates and may issue a tax assessment through myIR. You must file an IR3 if you have rental income, business income, overseas income, or have worked for multiple employers in a year. See how to file an NZ tax return for more.
How does secondary income tax work in NZ?
If you have more than one job in NZ, your secondary job income is taxed at a secondary tax code. The most common secondary tax codes are SB (10.5%), S (17.5%), SH (30%), ST (33%), and SA (39%). Choose the code that matches your combined income. See secondary income tax NZ for full details.
Is KiwiSaver deducted before or after tax?
KiwiSaver employee contributions are deducted from your gross pay — then income tax is calculated on the remaining amount. This means contributing to KiwiSaver also marginally reduces your PAYE tax bill. Employer contributions are not subject to income tax (they are taxed through PIE instead).