30% Ruling Salary Threshold 2026: Complete Guide

The salary threshold is the #1 reason 30% ruling applications get rejected. And most people misunderstand it completely. In this guide, we'll show you the exact 2026 thresholds, why gross salary isn't what matters, and how to avoid the costly mistakes that could derail your application.

What Are the 2026 Salary Thresholds?

The Dutch 30% ruling has two salary thresholds for 2026, and which one applies to you depends on your age and education level:

Category Minimum Taxable Salary Approximate Gross Salary
Standard (age 30+) €48,013 ~€68,590
Under-30 with Master's degree €36,497 ~€52,139

The key distinction here is critical: these are taxable salary figures, not gross. This single misunderstanding is why countless applications are rejected. The €48,013 or €36,497 must be your salary after the 30% deduction has already been applied—not your total paycheck.

The Critical Mistake: Gross vs. Taxable

Here's where 90% of applicants get confused: the 30% ruling gives you a temporary exemption on 30% of your salary, which means you only pay tax on 70% of it. The threshold is checked on that 70%, not the full amount.

In other words: your gross salary must be higher than the threshold to result in a taxable wage that also exceeds the threshold.

Maria's Situation

Maria earns €65,000 gross per year. She's over 30 and doesn't have a Master's degree, so the standard threshold of €48,013 applies.

With the 30% ruling, 30% of her €65,000 salary is exempt from tax. That means her taxable wage is 70% × €65,000 = €45,500.

Since €45,500 is below the €48,013 threshold, Maria does NOT qualify for the 30% ruling. She would need a gross salary of at least €68,590 to reach the taxable threshold of €48,013 (70% × €68,590 = €48,013).

So the formula is straightforward:

  • Taxable salary = Gross salary × 0.70
  • Minimum gross needed = Threshold ÷ 0.70

For the 2026 standard threshold of €48,013, your gross must be at least €48,013 ÷ 0.70 = €68,590.

Under-30 with Master's: The Reduced Threshold

If you were under 30 years old when you started work for your employer, and you hold a Master's degree (or equivalent), you qualify for a lower threshold.

2026 Under-30 Threshold

Minimum taxable salary: €36,497
Approximate gross salary needed: €36,497 ÷ 0.70 = €52,139

What counts as a Master's degree? The Dutch law recognizes:

  • Dutch Master's degrees (WO niveau): All university master's programs
  • Foreign Master's equivalents: If your degree is recognized as equivalent by the Nuffic or meets the "internationally accepted" standard
  • Professional Master's (where applicable): Some specialized master's programs are recognized

Important: Bachelor's degrees do not qualify for the reduced threshold, and the age requirement is strict—you must have been under 30 when you started employment with your current employer, not when you applied for the ruling.

Historical Comparison Table

The salary threshold rises each year in line with inflation. Here's how 2026 compares to previous years:

Year Standard Threshold Under-30 with Master's Approx. Gross (Standard)
2024 €46,000 €34,967 ~€65,714
2025 €47,000 €35,726 ~€67,143
2026 €48,013 €36,497 ~€68,590
2027 (projected) €50,436 €38,362 ~€72,051

Notice the steady climb. If you're considering applying, timing matters—the threshold will only increase.

The Balkenende Norm (Income Cap)

While there's a minimum salary threshold, there's also a maximum. The 30% ruling exemption is only available on salary earned up to the "Balkenende norm," which in 2026 is €262,000 per year.

If your gross salary exceeds €262,000, only the amount up to the cap benefits from the 30% exemption. Income above that is taxed at standard rates.

High Earner Example

João earns €350,000 gross. The 30% exemption only applies to the first €262,000. The remaining €88,000 is taxed as normal income at standard rates.

What Counts Toward the Threshold?

Not all compensation is equal. The threshold calculation is specific about what counts. Your employer should make this clear on your employment contract and payslips.

✓ Does count toward the threshold:

  • Base monthly salary
  • Holiday allowance (vakantiegeld)
  • 13th month bonuses (and similar regular annual bonuses)
  • Performance bonuses (if guaranteed or regular)
  • Shift allowances and similar supplements

✗ Does NOT count:

  • Expense allowances (housing, mobility, meal vouchers)
  • Stock options or equity compensation
  • One-off signing bonuses
  • Pension contributions from the employer
  • Irregular or non-guaranteed bonuses
  • Benefits in kind (company car, health insurance added by employer)

This is why your contract and salary structure matter enormously. If €15,000 of your €70,000 compensation is an expense allowance, only the remaining €55,000 counts toward the threshold—which would put you below the €68,590 gross requirement.

Common Pitfalls

1. Misreading Your Payslip

Many employers break down salary components in confusing ways. Double-check with your HR what portion of your compensation counts as "taxable wages" for the 30% ruling. Ask them explicitly: "Is my salary above the 2026 threshold of €48,013 (taxable)?"

2. Part-Time Employment

The threshold applies to a full-time position. If you work part-time, your salary must be sufficient to meet the full-time equivalent threshold. If you work 80% of full-time, your gross would need to be approximately €68,590 ÷ 0.80 = €85,738.

3. Salary Reductions During the Ruling Period

Your salary must meet the threshold when you apply. If it drops below the threshold during the 5-year ruling period, the Belastingdienst could revoke it. Be careful with career changes, demotions, or voluntary reductions.

4. Variable Compensation

Bonuses and commissions are tricky. If they're not guaranteed and regular, they may not count toward the threshold. The Belastingdienst wants to see stable, predictable income.

5. Confusing Gross and Taxable

We've mentioned this, but it bears repeating: the threshold is on taxable wages after the 30% exemption, not your gross paycheck. Get a letter from your payroll department confirming your taxable salary for 30% ruling purposes.

Looking Ahead: 2027 Changes

The 30% ruling is changing. Starting in 2027, the exemption will drop from 30% to 27%, and the salary threshold is expected to rise to approximately €50,436. This doesn't sound like much, but it's significant:

  • You'll need a higher salary to qualify
  • The tax benefit will be slightly smaller each year
  • The ruling period may shift (current proposals suggest changes to the 5-year window)

If you're considering the 30% ruling, applying before the end of 2026 could be advantageous. The window to lock in the 30% exemption (rather than 27%) is closing.

Ready to Check Your Eligibility?

Now that you understand the salary thresholds, see if your income qualifies. Our free calculator takes your gross salary and instantly tells you whether you meet the 2026 requirements.