New Zealand PAYE Calculator
Our free NZ PAYE calculator gives you a complete breakdown of take-home pay — income tax, ACC levy, KiwiSaver, and student loan. Built on the latest 2025/26 IRD rates.
PAYE Tax Breakdown (tap to expand)
How It Works – NZ PAYE calculator guide
How Your NZ Take-Home Pay Is Calculated
New Zealand uses the PAYE (Pay As You Earn) system — your employer deducts income tax, ACC levy, KiwiSaver, and student loan repayments from every payslip before it reaches your account. This NZ PAYE calculator uses official IRD website rates and thresholds. There is no tax-free threshold in NZ, but the progressive brackets mean your effective rate is always well below the headline marginal rate.
- Gross Pay – Your salary before any deductions — enter annual, monthly, weekly, or hourly.
- PAYE Tax – Progressive across five brackets (10.5%–39%). Only income within each band gets that rate.
- ACC Levy – 1.67% of earnings up to $152,790. Funds New Zealand’s no-fault accident cover (ACC New Zealand).
- KiwiSaver – Your chosen rate (3%–10%) deducted automatically. Employer adds at least 3% on top.
- Take-Home – Everything left after deductions — what actually lands in your bank account.
Tax Rates – 2025/26 NZ PAYE calculator brackets
NZ Income Tax Brackets 2025–2026
New Zealand’s five progressive PAYE brackets for 2025/26 (1 April 2025 – 31 March 2026). Updated thresholds took full effect from 1 April 2025 — the first threshold change in over a decade. For more tools, visit our financial calculators. This NZ PAYE calculator applies exact IRD bands.
| Annual Taxable Income | PAYE Rate | Tax on Band | Cumulative Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| $0 – $15,600 | 10.5% | $1,638 | $1,638 |
| $15,601 – $53,500 | 17.5% | $6,632.50 | $8,270.50 |
| $53,501 – $78,100 | 30% | $7,380 | $15,650.50 |
| $78,101 – $180,000 | 33% | $33,627 | $49,277.50 |
| Above $180,000 | 39% | On excess | — |
Deductions Explained – Your NZ PAYE calculator details
What Comes Out of Your NZ Payslip
- 🧾 PAYE Income Tax – 10.5% → 39% progressive
- 🩺 ACC Earner’s Levy – 1.67% · cap $152,790 (as per ACC New Zealand)
- 🏦 KiwiSaver – 3%–10% · employer adds 3%+
- 🎓 Student Loan – 12% above $24,128/year
✦ Independent Earner Tax Credit (IETC) — up to $520/year
This NZ PAYE calculator also reflects IETC when selected, following the official IRD website guidelines.
FAQ – NZ PAYE calculator & common questions
Common Questions About NZ PAYE Tax
How does the NZ PAYE system work?
PAYE (Pay As You Earn) means your employer deducts income tax, ACC levy, KiwiSaver, and student loan repayments from every paycheque before you receive it. IRD reconciles your account at year end (31 March). If you’ve overpaid you get a refund; if underpaid you’ll receive a bill. Most employees with a single income source have very accurate deductions and owe nothing at year end.
What are NZ tax brackets for 2025–2026?
Five progressive brackets apply: 10.5% on the first $15,600; 17.5% on $15,601–$53,500; 30% on $53,501–$78,100; 33% on $78,101–$180,000; and 39% above $180,000. These took effect 31 July 2024 and apply in full from 1 April 2025 — the first threshold change in over a decade. Our NZ PAYE calculator is updated for these rates.
What is the ACC earner’s levy?
The ACC earner’s levy for 2025/26 is 1.67% of gross earnings, capped at $152,790 (maximum $2,551.59/year). It funds the Accident Compensation Corporation — New Zealand’s universal no-fault accident cover. In return, you cannot sue for personal injuries. Your employer deducts it alongside PAYE each pay run.
What KiwiSaver rate should I choose?
Options are 3%, 3.5%, 4%, 6%, 8%, or 10% of your gross pay. Your employer must add at least 3% on top — not from your pay. Higher contributions reduce take-home pay now but build retirement savings faster. From 1 April 2026, the legislated default for both employees and employers rises to 3.5%.
What is the IETC and do I qualify?
The Independent Earner Tax Credit is worth up to $520/year for NZ residents earning $24,000–$70,000 who don’t receive Working for Families, NZ Super, or a main benefit. The full $520 applies up to $44,000, then reduces by 13 cents per dollar, phasing out at $70,000. Use the ME tax code (or ME SL if you have a student loan) to claim it automatically.
Why is my effective tax rate lower than my bracket?
Because NZ’s progressive system only taxes income within each bracket at that rate — not your whole salary. Earning $80,000 means you pay 33% on just $1,900 (the slice above $78,100), not on all $80,000. The lower brackets still apply to the first portions of your income. That’s why crossing into a higher bracket never makes you worse off overall.
