Wage contributions in Hungary

The Hungarian tax system related to employment has followed a relatively stable structure for many years, although smaller adjustments appear from time to time.

IMPORTANT: Under current Hungarian legislation, the managing director of a Hungarian company is required to pay taxes and social contributions based on the statutory guaranteed minimum wage, even if they do not actually receive any salary.

 

1. Contributions Paid by the EMPLOYEE (deducted from gross salary)

The following taxes and contributions are deducted from the employee’s gross salary:

 

1.1. Personal Income Tax (PIT): 15%

This is the largest item deducted from every salary (except in cases where tax allowances apply).

Examples of available allowances:

  • tax allowance for people under 25

  • allowance for mothers with four or more children

  • newly married couples’ allowance

  • disability allowance

  • first-marriage allowance

These allowances can reduce or even completely eliminate the PIT liability.

 

1.2. Social Security Contribution (SSC): 18.5%

This is a consolidated contribution that has been paid in a unified form for years. The distribution is as follows:

  • pension contribution: 10%

  • health insurance contribution (in-kind and cash benefits): 7%

  • labour market contribution: 1.5%

 

Total deductions from the employee: 33.5% of the gross salary

This means that with a gross monthly salary of HUF 500,000, the employee’s net salary is approximately HUF 332,500 (without applying any allowances).

 

2. Contributions Paid by the EMPLOYER

The employer’s obligations remain unchanged in 2025:

 

2.1. Social Contribution Tax (SZOCHO): 13%

This is paid on the total gross salary.

Certain categories of employment are eligible for SZOCHO allowances (e.g. young entrants, rehabilitation allowance, R&D employees, specific sectoral allowances).

 

2.3. Rehabilitation Contribution (special rule)

This does not apply to all companies—only if:

  • the average statistical headcount exceeds 25 employees, and

  • the ratio of employees with reduced working capacity does not reach 5%

 

In 2025, the contribution amount is: HUF 2,300,000 per missing person per year. This can be a significant cost for many companies.

 

Total employer burden: 13%, provided the rehabilitation contribution does not apply.

 

3. How Much Does an Employee Really Cost the Company? (example for November 2025)

Let’s consider an employee with a gross monthly salary of HUF 500,000.

Employer’s total cost:

  • Gross salary: HUF 500,000

  • 13% SZOCHO = HUF 65,000

  • Total employer cost: HUF 565,000

 

Employee’s net salary:

  • 15% PIT: – HUF 75,000

  • 18.5% SSC: – HUF 92,500

  • Net salary: HUF 332,500

 

So the employee receives HUF 332,500, while the company pays HUF 565,000 for that same employee. Total taxes and contributions: HUF 232,500 (in November, 2025)

 

In conclusion…

Knowing the exact structure of contributions is essential for:

  • employer cost planning

  • salary calculations

  • employee decision-making

  • HR strategy

  • salary negotiations

 

Although the Hungarian tax system may seem complex at first sight, its basic structure is stable and predictable. Both businesses and employees benefit from understanding the financial burdens associated with employment — it forms one of the cornerstones of long-term financial and HR planning.