Should I Move 16 min

Best Countries to Relocate as a Software Engineer in 2026: A Data-Driven Comparison

Compare the best countries to relocate as a software engineer using real median salaries from levels.fyi, local tax calculations, and cost of living for 2026.

Best Countries to Relocate as a Software Engineer in 2026: A Data-Driven Comparison

A mid-level software engineer in San Francisco earns a median of $278,000 — but after California taxes and Bay Area rent, the monthly surplus may not be as impressive as it sounds. The same engineer in Zurich earns $155,000 but keeps $9,741/month after Swiss taxes. In Dubai, a $95,000 salary stays $95,000 because there is no income tax. But salary alone does not determine quality of life — it is what remains after taxes, rent, and living costs that matters.

Methodology: We used median software engineer total compensation from levels.fyi (P50, as of February 2026) for each country and US metro area. Net pay was calculated using our own tax calculators with 2026 brackets — single filer, no dependents, standard deductions. Cost of living data comes from Numbeo. All figures in USD.

Table of Contents

Key Takeaways

Point What the Data Shows
Highest gross salaries SF Bay Area ($278K), Seattle ($250K), Switzerland ($155K), Ireland ($118K), UK ($116K)
Best net salary Seattle ($183K net — no state tax + high salary), SF ($180K net), Switzerland ($117K net), UAE ($95K — 0% tax)
Best purchasing power UAE/Dubai, Austin TX, Czech Republic, and Poland offer the most after costs relative to salary
Europe's hidden gem Czech Republic — $66K gross but a 24% effective tax rate and Prague rent at $1,050/month
Biggest tax surprise Finland's 41.6% effective rate on $82K means a Helsinki engineer keeps less than a Prague engineer earning $66K

Where You Keep the Most Money: Net Income Ranking

This table ranks every location by monthly net salary — what actually hits your bank account after all taxes and social contributions.

Rank Location Gross salary Effective tax rate Annual net Monthly net
1 Seattle, WA $249,750 26.7% $183,018 $15,251
2 SF Bay Area, CA $278,000 35.3% $179,989 $14,999
3 Austin, TX $186,000 25.5% $138,490 $11,541
4 NYC, NY $193,250 35.1% $125,451 $10,454
5 Los Angeles, CA $178,500 33.3% $119,022 $9,919
6 Boston, MA $168,750 29.7% $118,569 $9,881
7 Denver, CO $165,000 28.8% $117,426 $9,785
8 Switzerland $154,521 24.4% $116,891 $9,741
9 Miami, FL $143,520 23.8% $109,362 $9,113
10 Chicago, IL $149,000 28.9% $105,869 $8,822
11 Dallas, TX $135,000 23.3% $103,539 $8,628
12 UAE/Dubai $95,000 0% $95,000 $7,917
13 UK $116,091 30.5% $80,697 $6,725
14 Ireland $117,704 36.6% $74,613 $6,218
15 Denmark $103,986 35.1% $67,450 $5,621
16 Netherlands $103,621 38.9% $63,315 $5,276
17 Norway $83,604 30.3% $58,311 $4,859
18 Germany $94,764 39.1% $57,738 $4,812
19 Sweden $70,804 25.6% $52,711 $4,393
20 Czech Republic $65,946 24.0% $50,124 $4,177
21 Finland $82,383 41.6% $48,119 $4,010
22 Poland $70,011 38.4% $43,113 $3,593
23 France $64,915 33.7% $43,030 $3,586
24 Spain $60,433 29.6% $42,547 $3,546
25 Portugal $48,238 33.1% $32,279 $2,690
Important: Net salary alone does not tell the full story. A Seattle engineer earning $15,251/month net still pays $2,800+ for a one-bedroom. A Prague engineer earning $4,177/month pays $1,050. The gap narrows dramatically when you subtract living costs — see the lifestyle comparison table below.

The US Baseline: What You Are Comparing Against

Most software engineers considering relocation are leaving (or comparing against) a US salary. Here is what the median looks like across major US tech hubs, using levels.fyi US heatmap data.

Metro area Median gross (P50) State tax? Net salary/yr Monthly net 1-bed rent (center) Monthly disposable
SF Bay Area $278,000 CA: up to 13.3% $179,989 $14,999 $3,200 ~$10,800
Seattle $249,750 WA: 0% $183,018 $15,251 $2,400 ~$11,900
NYC $193,250 NY: up to 10.9% + city tax $125,451 $10,454 $3,500 ~$5,950
Austin $186,000 TX: 0% $138,490 $11,541 $1,800 ~$8,800
Los Angeles $178,500 CA: up to 13.3% $119,022 $9,919 $2,700 ~$6,250
Boston $168,750 MA: 5% + 4% surtax >$1M $118,569 $9,881 $2,800 ~$6,100
Denver $165,000 CO: 4.4% $117,426 $9,785 $1,900 ~$6,950
Chicago $149,000 IL: 4.95% $105,869 $8,822 $2,100 ~$5,750
Miami $143,520 FL: 0% $109,362 $9,113 $2,500 ~$5,600
Dallas $135,000 TX: 0% $103,539 $8,628 $1,600 ~$6,100

The takeaway: Seattle and Austin combine high salaries with zero state income tax, producing the highest disposable incomes in the US. California and New York salaries look massive but the combined state/local taxes plus extreme rents significantly reduce the advantage.

Why engineers still consider leaving: Even at $15,251/month net in Seattle, many engineers weigh factors like healthcare costs ($500–$1,500/month for a family plan), limited PTO (US average: 15 days), childcare ($2,000–$3,500/month), and student loan payments. European countries bundle many of these into taxes.


Europe: Country-by-Country Breakdown

Switzerland

Switzerland pays the highest software engineer salaries in Europe and has the lowest tax rate among high-income countries. The catch: everything costs more.

Median SE salary: $154,521 (P50, 739 submissions on levels.fyi). The P25 is $123,751 and P75 is $232,186, reflecting Switzerland's high ceiling at companies like Google Zurich, UBS, and Credit Suisse.

Net salary: Switzerland's effective tax rate at this income is approximately 24.4%. Take-home: $116,891/year ($9,741/month). Swiss taxes are among the lowest in Europe — the combination of moderate federal rates, cantonal variation (Zurich is mid-range), and no separate social security tax on most income keeps the burden low.

Monthly expense Zurich Basel Bern
1-bed apartment (center) $2,600 $1,800 $1,500
Groceries $550 $500 $480
Transport pass $95 $90 $85
Utilities + internet $250 $230 $220
Total basic costs $3,495 $2,620 $2,285
Monthly disposable $6,246 $7,121 $7,456

Even in expensive Zurich, the high net salary produces the best disposable income in Europe.

Visa options:


Ireland

Ireland's tech sector punches well above its weight. Dublin is the European headquarters for Apple, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Salesforce, and Stripe — producing salaries that rival London.

Median SE salary: $117,704 (P50, 1,168 submissions). P25 is $83,693, P75 is $157,259. Dublin's big-tech concentration drives the high median; smaller companies pay closer to the P25.

Net salary: Ireland's effective rate at this income is approximately 36.6%. Take-home: $74,613/year ($6,218/month). Irish income tax (20% on the first €42,000, 40% above) plus USC (Universal Social Charge, 0.5–8%) and PRSI (4%) add up quickly.

Monthly expense Dublin Cork Galway
1-bed apartment (center) $2,200 $1,700 $1,400
Groceries $380 $340 $330
Transport pass $120 $55 $50
Utilities + internet $220 $200 $190
Total basic costs $2,920 $2,295 $1,970
Monthly disposable $3,298 $3,923 $4,248

Dublin rent is the main issue — it has one of the tightest housing markets in Europe. Cork and Galway offer significantly better value.

Visa options:


United Kingdom

The UK has the highest software engineer salaries in Europe after Switzerland and Ireland, driven by London's finance and big-tech presence. Outside London, salaries drop but so do costs — dramatically.

Median SE salary: $116,091 (P50, 4,913 submissions — the largest sample in Europe). P25 is $78,185, P75 is $170,247. London skews higher; the P25 better represents typical mid-level roles outside London.

Net salary: The UK's effective rate at this income is approximately 30.5%. Take-home: $80,697/year ($6,725/month). UK income tax (20% basic, 40% higher rate above £50,270) plus National Insurance (8% on £12,570–£50,270, 2% above) is moderate by European standards.

Monthly expense London Manchester Edinburgh
1-bed apartment (center) $2,500 $1,400 $1,250
Groceries $450 $350 $360
Transport pass $200 $80 $75
Utilities + internet $320 $200 $200
Total basic costs $3,470 $2,030 $1,885
Monthly disposable $3,255 $4,695 $4,840

Manchester and Edinburgh offer substantially better value. Salaries outside London are typically 20–30% lower, but costs drop 40–50%, often producing higher disposable income.

Visa options:


Denmark

Denmark's tech scene is smaller but growing, with strong salaries driven by Maersk, Novo Nordisk, and a handful of tech companies. High taxes fund comprehensive public services.

Median SE salary: $103,986 (P50, 172 submissions). P25 is $86,940, P75 is $132,268. Sample size is modest but reflects Copenhagen's market well.

Net salary: Denmark's effective rate at this income is approximately 35.1%. Take-home: $67,450/year ($5,621/month). Danish income tax combines a bottom tax (12.09%), top tax (15% above DKK 568,900), AM-bidrag (8% labor market contribution), and municipal tax (~24.9% average).

Monthly expense Copenhagen Aarhus
1-bed apartment (center) $1,800 $1,200
Groceries $400 $370
Transport pass $60 $50
Utilities + internet $220 $200
Total basic costs $2,480 $1,820
Monthly disposable $3,141 $3,801

Visa options:


Netherlands

The Netherlands has the 30% ruling — a tax advantage that can dramatically reduce your effective rate for the first 5 years.

Median SE salary: $103,621 (P50, 1,417 submissions). P25 is $80,833, P75 is $144,500. Amsterdam skews higher due to Booking.com, Uber, and other big-tech offices.

Net salary: The standard effective rate at this income is approximately 38.9%. Take-home: $63,315/year ($5,276/month). Dutch income tax rates are 36.97% up to ~€38,441 (includes national insurance) and 49.5% above.

30% ruling: Qualifying expats can treat 30% of their salary as tax-free. On the median salary, this could save €8,000–€14,000 in taxes annually, pushing net closer to $73,000/year ($6,100/month). The ruling lasts 5 years. Verify eligibility on the Netherlands Tax Authority website.

Monthly expense Amsterdam Rotterdam Utrecht
1-bed apartment (center) $2,300 $1,600 $1,600
Groceries $400 $360 $370
Transport + bike $100 $85 $90
Utilities + internet $270 $240 $245
Total basic costs $3,070 $2,285 $2,305
Monthly disposable $2,206 $2,991 $2,971

Amsterdam's high rent erodes the salary advantage. Rotterdam and Utrecht offer comparable quality of life at significantly lower cost.

Visa options:

  • Highly Skilled Migrant Visa (HSMP): Requires a job from a recognized employer meeting the salary threshold (~€5,008/month for applicants under 30, higher for others).

Germany

Germany's tax burden is among the highest in Europe — but it includes comprehensive health insurance, pension, and unemployment coverage. German SE salaries are competitive on the continent.

Median SE salary: $94,764 (P50, 3,812 submissions — second largest European sample). P25 is $77,733, P75 is $117,014. Berlin and Munich track close to the median.

Net salary: Germany's effective rate at this income is approximately 39.1%. Take-home: $57,738/year ($4,812/month). The high rate includes mandatory social contributions: health (~8.75% employee), pension (~9.3%), unemployment (~1.3%), and long-term care (~2.3%), all capped at contribution ceilings.

Monthly expense Berlin Munich Hamburg
1-bed apartment (center) $1,350 $2,100 $1,500
Groceries $330 $360 $340
Transport (Deutschlandticket) $68 $68 $68
Utilities + internet $240 $250 $240
Total basic costs $1,988 $2,778 $2,148
Monthly disposable $2,824 $2,034 $2,664

Berlin in particular offers strong disposable income — high salary, moderate rent compared to Amsterdam or London. The €49/month Deutschlandticket covers all public transport nationwide.

Visa options:


Norway

Norway combines strong salaries with a moderate tax rate and world-class public services. Oslo is expensive, but the net salary holds up well.

Median SE salary: $83,604 (P50, 117 submissions). P25 is $70,494, P75 is $99,097. Smaller sample but consistent with Norwegian wage data.

Net salary: Norway's effective rate at this income is approximately 30.3%. Take-home: $58,311/year ($4,859/month). Norway uses a bracket tax (trinnskatt) system plus 8.2% social security contributions. The tax-free personal allowance is NOK 88,250.

Monthly expense Oslo Bergen
1-bed apartment (center) $1,700 $1,300
Groceries $450 $420
Transport pass $80 $70
Utilities + internet $230 $220
Total basic costs $2,460 $2,010
Monthly disposable $2,399 $2,849

Visa options:

  • Skilled Workers Permit: Requires a concrete job offer, relevant qualifications, and pay meeting Norwegian standards.

Finland

Finland offers excellent quality of life and strong public services, but the tax rate is the highest in this comparison — software engineers lose over 41% of their gross income.

Median SE salary: $82,383 (P50, 184 submissions). P25 is $62,396, P75 is $99,218.

Net salary: Finland's effective rate at this income is approximately 41.6%. Take-home: $48,119/year ($4,010/month). Finnish income tax combines state progressive rates (up to 44%), municipal tax (~20.5% average), plus pension (TyEL, 7.15%) and unemployment insurance (~1.5%).

Monthly expense Helsinki Tampere
1-bed apartment (center) $1,300 $900
Groceries $350 $320
Transport pass $70 $55
Utilities + internet $170 $150
Total basic costs $1,890 $1,425
Monthly disposable $2,120 $2,585

The high tax rate means Helsinki produces lower disposable income than Prague, despite a $16,000 higher gross salary.

Visa options:

  • Specialist Residence Permit: For skilled workers with a job offer. Employer handles the application. Processing times have improved significantly since 2024.

Sweden

Sweden's tech scene centers around Stockholm with Spotify, Klarna, King, and Ericsson. Moderate taxes by Nordic standards thanks to a relatively low municipal rate.

Median SE salary: $70,804 (P50, 449 submissions). P25 is $57,588, P75 is $83,266.

Net salary: Sweden's effective rate at this income is approximately 25.6%. Take-home: $52,711/year ($4,393/month). Sweden's municipal tax averages ~32%, but generous deductions (jobbskatteavdrag) and the basic allowance significantly reduce the effective rate on this income level. The national state tax (20%) only kicks in above SEK 598,500.

Monthly expense Stockholm Gothenburg Malmö
1-bed apartment (center) $1,500 $1,100 $1,000
Groceries $350 $330 $310
Transport pass $100 $80 $65
Utilities + internet $150 $140 $130
Total basic costs $2,100 $1,650 $1,505
Monthly disposable $2,293 $2,743 $2,888

Visa options:

  • Work Permit: Requires a job offer with terms meeting Swedish standards, including salary, insurance, and working conditions.

Poland

Poland is one of Europe's fastest-growing tech markets. Warsaw, Krakow, and Wroclaw all have thriving engineering scenes, driven by outsourcing hubs and increasingly by product companies.

Median SE salary: $70,011 (P50, 1,381 submissions — a large sample). P25 is $50,140, P75 is $93,163. The wide P25–P75 range reflects the gap between local companies and international employers.

Net salary: Poland's effective rate at this income is approximately 38.4%. Take-home: $43,113/year ($3,593/month). Polish income tax uses a 12% rate on income up to PLN 120,000, then 32% above. Social contributions (pension ~9.76%, disability ~1.5%, sickness ~2.45%, health ~9%) add significantly to the burden.

Monthly expense Warsaw Krakow Wroclaw
1-bed apartment (center) $900 $700 $650
Groceries $280 $250 $240
Transport pass $30 $28 $25
Utilities + internet $200 $180 $175
Total basic costs $1,410 $1,158 $1,090
Monthly disposable $2,183 $2,435 $2,503

The low cost of living compensates for the lower salary. Krakow and Wroclaw are particularly attractive — strong tech communities, low rent, and growing international presence.

Visa options:

  • EU Blue Card: For highly qualified workers from outside the EU with a recognized degree and a job offer meeting salary thresholds.
  • National Visa + Work Permit: Standard work authorization route requiring employer sponsorship.

Czech Republic

Prague is one of Europe's most underrated cities for expats — high quality of life, a growing tech sector with Microsoft, Pure Storage, and Veeam, and a remarkably low flat-rate tax.

Median SE salary: $65,946 (P50, 479 submissions). P25 is $47,180, P75 is $87,279.

Net salary: The Czech Republic's effective rate at this income is approximately 24.0%. Take-home: $50,124/year ($4,177/month). Czech income tax is a 15% flat rate (23% only above ~CZK 1,676,000). Employee social contributions total 11% (6.5% pension + 4.5% health). The personal tax credit of CZK 30,840 reduces the effective rate further.

Monthly expense Prague Brno
1-bed apartment (center) $1,050 $750
Groceries $280 $250
Transport pass $25 $20
Utilities + internet $220 $190
Total basic costs $1,575 $1,210
Monthly disposable $2,602 $2,967

The combination of competitive salary, low flat tax, and significantly lower costs than Western Europe makes Czech Republic one of the strongest value propositions in Europe. Prague produces higher disposable income than Helsinki despite a salary that is $16,000 lower.

Visa options:


Spain

Spain's Digital Nomad Visa and the Beckham Law tax incentive make it one of the most interesting entries for newcomers. The baseline salary is lower than Northern Europe, but the tax breaks and lower costs change the math.

Median SE salary: $60,433 (P50, 1,439 submissions). P25 is $41,217, P75 is $84,818. Barcelona skews higher due to Spotify, King, and other tech offices.

Net salary: Spain's effective rate at this income is approximately 29.6%. Take-home: $42,547/year ($3,546/month). Spanish income tax (IRPF) is progressive up to 47%, with employee social contributions of around 6.35% (capped).

Beckham Law exception: Foreign workers arriving under the Beckham Law pay a flat 24% tax on Spanish income up to €600,000 for 6 years. On the median salary, this could push net closer to $46,000/year ($3,830/month).

Monthly expense Madrid Barcelona Valencia
1-bed apartment (center) $1,500 $1,750 $1,050
Groceries $300 $320 $270
Transport pass $60 $95 $48
Utilities + internet $125 $125 $115
Total basic costs $1,985 $2,290 $1,483
Monthly disposable $1,561 $1,256 $2,063

Valencia stands out as the best-value option in Spain — lower costs with growing tech employment.

Visa options:


Portugal

Portugal remains one of the top relocation choices for English-speaking expats — warm climate, growing tech scene, and the lowest cost of living in Western Europe. The trade-off: the lowest software engineer salary in this comparison.

Median SE salary: $48,238 (P50, 496 submissions). P25 is $32,438, P75 is $69,775. Lisbon pays a premium over the country average.

Net salary: Portugal's effective rate at this income is approximately 33.1%. Take-home: $32,279/year ($2,690/month). Portugal's income tax (IRS) is progressive up to 48%, and employee social security is 11%.

Monthly expense Lisbon Porto
1-bed apartment (center) $1,350 $1,050
Groceries $300 $270
Transport pass $47 $42
Utilities + internet $135 $115
Total basic costs $1,832 $1,477
Monthly disposable $858 $1,213

Tight margins on a local salary, especially in Lisbon. Porto is significantly more affordable. Engineers earning a higher remote salary from a foreign employer see much better numbers.

Visa options:


UAE / Dubai

No income tax. No capital gains tax. No social security contributions. The UAE is the financial outlier in this comparison.

Median SE salary: $95,000 (~AED 349,000). The Dubai tech scene is growing but sample sizes on levels.fyi are smaller (256 submissions).

Net salary: You keep $95,000 — the full amount. There is no personal income tax in the UAE. US citizens still owe US taxes on worldwide income, though the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion covers up to $130,000 in 2026.

Monthly expense Dubai (Marina/Downtown) Dubai (suburbs)
1-bed apartment $2,200 $1,200
Groceries $400 $350
Transport (car common) $400 $350
Utilities + internet $250 $200
Total basic costs $3,250 $2,100
Monthly disposable $4,667 $5,817

Zero tax on a $95K salary produces one of the highest disposable incomes in this comparison, even in expensive central Dubai.

Visa options:

  • Employment Visa: Sponsored by employer. 2-3 year renewable.
  • Golden Visa: 10-year residency for investors, entrepreneurs, and specialized talents.
  • Freelance Permit: Available through various free zones for self-employment.

What Salary Would You Need to Maintain Your Lifestyle?

This is the question that matters most: if you earn a given salary in one city, what gross salary would you need in another city to maintain the same standard of living?

The table below uses an SF Bay Area engineer earning $278,000 as the baseline. For each destination, we show the equivalent gross salary needed to match the same purchasing power — and how that compares to the actual median SE salary there.

Destination Equivalent salary needed Actual median SE salary Gap Verdict
Seattle, WA $220,000 $249,750 +$29,750 Better off — higher salary, lower taxes, lower rent
Austin, TX $175,000 $186,000 +$11,000 Better off — no state tax + lower costs
NYC, NY $260,000 $193,250 -$66,750 Worse off — similar costs, lower salary
Zurich $195,000 $154,521 -$40,479 Worse off — but closes if you factor free healthcare + pension
London $155,000 $116,091 -$38,909 Worse off — unless remote at US salary
Dublin $140,000 $117,704 -$22,296 Slightly worse — close if at big-tech salary (P75: $157K)
Berlin $110,000 $94,764 -$15,236 Slightly worse — but includes health, pension, 30 PTO days
Amsterdam $135,000 $103,621 -$31,379 Worse off — improves significantly with 30% ruling
Copenhagen $130,000 $103,986 -$26,014 Slightly worse — excellent public services offset gap
Prague $75,000 $65,946 -$9,054 Close to parity — remarkably good value
Warsaw $70,000 $70,011 +$11 At parity — local salary matches lifestyle requirement
Madrid $90,000 $60,433 -$29,567 Worse off — improves with Beckham Law
Lisbon $80,000 $48,238 -$31,762 Worse off — only works with remote US/UK salary
Dubai $135,000 $95,000 -$40,000 Worse off nominally — but 0% tax + no health costs closes gap
Key insight: Warsaw and Prague are the only European cities where the median local SE salary roughly matches what you would need to maintain an SF-equivalent lifestyle. Everywhere else, you either need a remote salary or accept a trade-off (lower savings but better quality of life, public healthcare, more PTO, etc.).

Relocation Scenarios: Real Calculator Examples

Here are four common relocation scenarios. Run each one yourself using the ShouldIMove calculator.

Scenario 1: SF → Berlin

An SF engineer earning $180,000 considers Berlin. Using our calculator:

  • SF net: ~$120,000/year ($10,000/month) after California + federal taxes
  • Berlin net: ~$57,700/year ($4,812/month) at the local median ($94,764)
  • But: Berlin rent is $1,350 vs SF's $3,200. After basic costs, the gap shrinks from $5,188/month to ~$2,000/month
  • Plus: German health insurance is included in taxes (no separate $500–$1,500/month premium), 30 days PTO, parental leave, and free university education for children

Try it: Compare San Francisco vs Berlin

Scenario 2: NYC → Dublin

A NYC engineer earning $193,000 considers Dublin's big-tech scene:

  • NYC net: ~$125,000/year ($10,454/month) after federal + state + city taxes
  • Dublin net: ~$74,600/year ($6,218/month) at the local median ($117,704)
  • After costs: NYC rent ($3,500) vs Dublin ($2,200) narrows it. Both are expensive cities.
  • Trade-off: Lower take-home, but EU residency, 25 days annual leave, and access to public healthcare

Try it: Compare New York vs Dublin

Scenario 3: London → Lisbon (remote salary)

A London engineer keeping their £80K remote salary considers Lisbon:

  • London net: ~£54,500/year (£4,540/month) after UK taxes
  • Lisbon net (on £80K): ~£53,600/year after Portuguese taxes — nearly identical net
  • After costs: London basic costs £3,470/month vs Lisbon £1,832/month — the engineer saves £1,638/month more in Lisbon
  • Result: Same net salary, €1,900+ more in savings each month

Try it: Compare London vs Lisbon

Scenario 4: Austin → Prague

An Austin engineer earning $186,000 considers Prague:

  • Austin net: ~$138,490/year ($11,541/month) — zero state tax
  • Prague net: ~$50,124/year ($4,177/month) at the local median
  • After costs: Austin basic costs ~$2,750/month vs Prague ~$1,575/month
  • Result: Austin wins on pure disposable income (~$8,800 vs ~$2,600/month), but Prague offers European lifestyle, 25 PTO days, universal healthcare, and €25/month public transport

Try it: Compare Austin vs Prague


How to Compare Your Own Numbers

The numbers above use median salaries — yours will differ

Your actual salary depends on your experience level, company, and specialization. Net salary also varies by marital status, children, and employer-specific deductions. The ShouldIMove calculator computes net pay for your exact salary across 48 countries and compares it against city-level cost of living data — giving you disposable income, not just net pay.

  1. Enter your current gross salary and city
  2. Select your target destination city
  3. The calculator runs net salary calculations using that country's tax system
  4. It compares take-home pay against actual cost of living data for that city
  5. You see the monthly disposable income difference

Run your comparison at shouldimove.co


Frequently Asked Questions

Which European country has the highest software engineer salary?
Switzerland leads with a median total compensation of $154,521 according to levels.fyi (739 data points). Ireland ($117,704) and the UK ($116,091) follow. However, net salary after taxes tells a different story: Switzerland's low 24.4% effective rate means engineers keep $116,891/year, while Ireland's 36.6% rate reduces $117,704 to just $74,613.
Where will I have the most disposable income as a software engineer?
In absolute terms, Seattle ($15,251/month net, $2,400 rent) and Austin ($11,541/month net, $1,800 rent) lead due to high salaries and zero state income tax. In Europe, Zurich ($9,741/month net) and Dubai ($7,917/month net with 0% tax) produce the highest surplus. For relative purchasing power — where your money stretches furthest — Prague, Warsaw, and Brno outperform thanks to extremely low costs against decent salaries.
Which countries have no income tax?
The UAE (including Dubai) has no personal income tax. The Bahamas, Cayman Islands, Monaco, Bahrain, and Saudi Arabia also have no income tax. Some countries like Portugal and Spain offer multi-year tax incentives for new residents. US citizens owe US taxes on worldwide income regardless of residence, though the Foreign Earned Income Exclusion can shelter up to $130,000 in 2026.
How do I account for taxes when comparing salaries across countries?
Never compare gross salaries directly. Each country has different income tax brackets, social contributions, and payroll taxes. Germany's 39.1% effective rate on $95K produces the same take-home as Portugal's 33.1% rate on $48K would seem to suggest a bigger gap — but the absolute numbers ($57,738 vs $32,279) show the real picture. Use the ShouldIMove calculator which applies each country's actual 2026 tax system to your salary, then compares it against local living costs.
Which countries offer digital nomad or remote work visas for software engineers?
As of 2026, active digital nomad or remote worker visa programs relevant to engineers include:
  • Portugal: D8 Digital Nomad Visa — income requirement ~€3,480/month
  • Spain: Digital Nomad Visa — income requirement ~€2,646/month from foreign employers
  • Germany: Freelancer Visa (Freiberufler) — for qualified professionals
  • UAE: Virtual Working Program — 1-year permit for employed foreigners working remotely
Over 60 countries now have some form of remote work visa. For a deeper comparison, see our digital nomad visas and tax guide.
How much money do I need to relocate internationally?
Beyond ongoing living costs, plan for one-time expenses:
  • Visa and legal fees: $500–$5,000+
  • Security deposit (1–2 months rent): $700–$4,600
  • First month's rent: $700–$2,600
  • Flights + shipping: $2,000–$10,000
  • Emergency buffer (3 months expenses): $5,000–$15,000
Minimum realistic budget: $10,000–$15,000 for Czech Republic or Poland. $20,000–$30,000 for Western Europe, Switzerland, or UAE.

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