Same hourly wage at 32 hours
Compare EUR 30 per hour in a four-day, 32-hour work week.
The hourly wage stays the same, but annual salary and the credit profile move down with the hours.
Compare net per month and net per year between 32 and 40 hours.
See an illustrative 2026 estimate for EUR 30 per hour using a 40-hour work week, then compare other hourly and weekly-hour setups.
This page starts from hourly pay and translates it into gross and net salary using a 40-hour week. That keeps it visible that an hourly wage without weekly hours is not yet a full salary picture.
Use the calculator as the decision tool, then use the page sections below to compare the assumptions behind the estimate.
At EUR 30 per hour and 40 hours per week, the calculator translates the pay into a concrete yearly and monthly salary picture for 2026. In this illustrative setup, that comes out around €3,773.53 net per month and €45,282.30 net per year.
At this pay band, wage tax and credit phase-out both matter at the same time. That makes side-by-side calculator comparisons more useful than a single gross-to-net shortcut.
The calculator first converts the hourly wage into annual salary using the selected work week and then applies wage tax and tax credits. That means not only gross per month changes, but the credit profile moves as well.
That is why comparing 40 hours with 24 or 32 hours, or with a monthly salary for the same work, is so useful. It shows whether the difference comes mainly from hours, salary structure, or payroll settings.
Compare EUR 30 per hour in a four-day, 32-hour work week.
The hourly wage stays the same, but annual salary and the credit profile move down with the hours.
Compare net per month and net per year between 32 and 40 hours.
Compare EUR 30 per hour in a part-time 24-hour week.
The yearly salary base becomes lower, which shifts the wage-tax and credit outcome as well.
Compare monthly net and yearly net between 24, 32, and 40 hours.
Use about EUR 5,200 gross per month as the monthly comparison point.
The salary base stays comparable, but you now read the pay as a monthly contract instead of an hourly contract.
Compare the same salary base via hourly and monthly input to see interpretation differences.
These questions stay focused on realistic payroll or salary situations, so you can compare them directly with the calculator.
Because the calculator translates the hourly wage into annual salary using the work week you enter. Fewer hours means a lower annual salary and therefore a different tax and credit picture.
The main change is in how the monthly salary package is structured. The total annual package can stay closer than the monthly comparison suggests.
Because an hourly wage without weekly hours is not a full salary picture. This page therefore chooses a visible 40-hour example week and then shows what changes when you test other schedules.
Employers may apply pension, Zvw, supplements, unpaid breaks, or other payroll methods that are not fully included here. That is why this remains an illustrative estimate.
Use the calculator as the decision tool, then use the page sections below to compare the assumptions behind the estimate.
Use the official pages below to verify the public rules behind the estimate and the example explanations.
Official Dutch income-tax and national-insurance rate page used as the base for payroll-tax explanations and calculator assumptions.
Open sourceOfficial 2026 labour-credit table used to explain why net salary changes with employment income levels.
Open sourceOfficial minimum-wage page used for entry-level and hourly-pay scenarios, including the 2026 adult hourly minimum wage.
Open source