Estonia Income Tax Calculator 2026 — 22% Flat + e-Residency

Calculate Estonian 2026 income tax: 22% flat PIT, €7,848 tax-free allowance (phases out €14,400–€25,200), 33% employer social tax, Pillar 2 pension, and distribution-only corporate tax model.

= €30,000 / year
Pillar 2: 2% employee + 4% redirected from social tax
63+ regain full basic exemption
Monthly salary:
€0
Net Monthly Pay
€0
Income Tax (22%)
€0
Unemployment Insurance (1.6%)
€0
Pillar 2 Pension (2%)

Monthly Pay Breakdown

Total Employer Cost (Monthly)

Estonia Tax System 2026

Estonia's flat 22% income tax is simple and transparent. The employee's gross pay is reduced by unemployment insurance (1.6%), Pillar 2 pension contributions (2%, if enrolled), and income tax (22% on taxable income after the basic exemption). The employer separately pays a 33% social tax — not visible to the employee but representing the true cost of employment.

Formulas

Annual gross: monthly × 12
Basic exemption: €7,848 if gross ≤ €14,400; phases out linearly to €0 at €25,200
Taxable = gross − basic exemption − unemployment insurance − Pillar 2
Income Tax = taxable × 22%
Employer Social Tax = gross × 33%
Employer UI = gross × 0.8%

Example: €2,500/month gross

€2,500/month = €30,000/year
Basic exemption: €0 (above €25,200 — fully phased out)
UI (1.6%): €40/mo | Pillar 2 (2%): €50/mo
Taxable: €2,500 − €40 − €50 = €2,410
PIT: €2,410 × 22% = €530
Net: €2,500 − €40 − €50 − €530 = €1,880/month
Employer social tax: €2,500 × 33% = €825/month extra cost
Extended

e-Residency Tax Planning + Corporate Distribution Model

OÜ distribution-only taxation and employer cost breakdown

Estonian OÜ (private limited company) pays 0% corporate tax on retained earnings. Only distributions trigger the 22% rate. This allows unlimited profit accumulation tax-free.

The basic exemption phases out between €14,400 and €25,200 annual gross income — creating a steeper marginal rate in that band.

Annual GrossBasic ExemptionEffective Marginal RateNet Monthly

Breakdown of total employer cost vs employee net pay.

ComponentMonthly (€)Annual (€)% of Gross

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Estonia income tax rate for 2026?
Estonia has a flat 22% personal income tax (PIT) rate in 2026, raised from 20% in 2025. A tax-free personal allowance (basic exemption) of €7,848 per year applies, but this phases out between €14,400 and €25,200 of annual gross income — the allowance is fully eliminated for income above €25,200.
How does the Estonian tax-free allowance phase-out work?
The basic exemption of €7,848 decreases linearly once annual income exceeds €14,400. For every euro earned above €14,400, the exemption shrinks. At €25,200 and above, the exemption is zero. This creates a marginal tax "bump" in the €14,400–€25,200 range where the effective marginal rate exceeds 22%, making careful income planning worthwhile in that band.
Does Estonia have a zero corporate tax on retained earnings?
Yes. This is Estonia's most distinctive feature. Corporate profits are taxed at 0% as long as they remain in the company (retained earnings). The 22% corporate income tax only applies when profits are distributed as dividends or equivalents. This encourages reinvestment and is a major attraction for tech startups and e-Residents. Dividends to shareholders are not additionally taxed at the personal level if corporate tax has been paid.
How is Estonian social tax structured?
Estonian social tax (33%) is entirely paid by the employer — it is not deducted from the employee's gross wage. The employee also pays unemployment insurance at 1.6% and the employer pays an additional 0.8%. For pension Pillar 2 participants: the employee contributes 2% of gross, and 4% of social tax is redirected to their Pillar 2 pension fund. This means net employer cost is gross × (1 + 33% + 0.8%) = gross × 133.8%.
What is Estonian e-Residency and does it give tax benefits?
Estonian e-Residency is a digital identity allowing non-residents to establish and run an EU-based company. It does NOT make you an Estonian tax resident. An e-Resident running an OÜ (private limited company) pays 0% on retained profits; only actual distributions trigger 22% corporate tax. The e-Resident still pays tax in their own country of residence. e-Residency is primarily a business administration tool, not a tax tool — but the unique distribution-only taxation is a genuine benefit.