Monthly Income after Taxes
emaino
8th November 2008, 02:33 AM
I have looked around but havenīt found anything monthly related...
If I have a salary of NZ$100k/year I will need to pay NZ$30.270,00 in taxes - NZ$69.730,00 left yearly in my pocket.
My question is: if I want to know how much Iīll be bringing home per month do I need to divide this amount by 12 months? That simple?
NZ$100k/year = NZ$5.810,83/month after taxes?
Thanks for your help!
beanbeanz
8th November 2008, 09:43 AM
Yes, just divide by 12 to get your monthly income. However, most employers pay salaries out fortnightly.
emaino
8th November 2008, 10:49 AM
Thanks! Now I'll be able to create my monthly budget...
victoria24
8th November 2008, 11:45 AM
is tax taken at source or do you fill out an annual return?
IanW99
8th November 2008, 04:54 PM
is tax taken at source or do you fill out an annual return?
NZ has PAYE like the UK, so the employer takes out the tax at source.
You may however have to also fill out an annual tax return if you have other sources of income.
Ian
talisker
12th November 2008, 12:54 PM
NZ has PAYE like the UK, so the employer takes out the tax at source.
You may however have to also fill out an annual tax return if you have other sources of income.
Ian
or if you arrive from overseas and start working part way through the NZ tax year. PAYE in NZ is calculated based on only the current month's pay (i.e. each month you pay 1/12 of the tax would pay for the year if you were earning that amount for the full 12 months), whereas in the UK it's a cumulative calculation (i.e. each month you pay what you need to pay so that you've paid the correct tax for the year to date based on what you've earned to date). So if you come to the UK halfway through a tax year, your PAYE adjusts automatically so that you will pay the correct tax overall, but in NZ you'll overpay. Therefore - tax return needed after the tax year end, and you should get a handy refund.
DMcG
12th November 2008, 01:31 PM
You're in the top tax bracket - so you need to ensure that any bank accounts that give you interest are also set to pay tax at the highest amount :(
Otherwise, the IRD will send you a bill at the end of the tax year for underpaid tax :wah
Dougie
CJ22
12th November 2008, 01:51 PM
The bank will ask you what your salary is, so they can set the interest tax at the appropriate level.