Enter a yearly, monthly or weekly salary to see the full breakdown on take-home pay in Thailand — calculated from official 2026 government data.
Enter your gross salary in Thailand to see the full breakdown.
The four numbers that define your tax situation in Thailand.
Thailand uses a progressive income tax system with 8 brackets from 0% to 35%. The first THB 150,000 of net assessable income is exempt. Social security contribution is 5% of salary, capped at THB 875/month.
Visual decomposition of your gross salary into net pay and deductions.
Every bracket, every contribution, every calculation step.
| Component | Rate | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Income Tax | ||
| ฿0 – ฿150,000 @ 0.0%0.0% | 0.0% | ฿0 |
| ฿150,001 – ฿300,000 @ 5.0%5.0% | 5.0% | ฿7,500 |
| ฿300,001 – ฿500,000 @ 10.0%10.0% | 10.0% | ฿18,950 |
| Income Tax Subtotal | ฿26,450 | |
| Social Contributions | ||
| Social Security2.10% | 2.10% | ฿10,500 |
| Social Contributions Subtotal | ฿10,500 | |
| Total Deductions | ฿36,950 | |
| Net Annual Pay | ฿463,050 | |
This result does not apply the employment income deduction (50% of income, max THB 100,000) or the personal allowance (THB 60,000), which would reduce taxable income. Actual tax liability will typically be lower than shown. Residents (180+ days) are taxed on worldwide income.
This calculator provides a simplified estimate of income tax and mandatory social contributions. It is designed to help expats and relocating professionals compare take-home pay across countries, not to replace professional tax advice.
Assumes you are a full-year resident employee with a single gross salary.
Does not include deductions/credits, dependents, or special tax regimes.