Denmark vs Hungary: salary, tax & cost of living
Average wage, take-home after tax and cost of living, side by side — on real OECD wage data, PPP-adjusted. The headline salary and the net paycheck don't always point the same way.
Head to head
Denmark vs Hungary
| Metric | Denmark | Hungary | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average wage (PPP) | $74,022 | $34,996 | Denmark |
| Payroll deduction | 45% | 34% | Hungary |
| Net take-home (avg wage) | $40,712 | $23,272 | Denmark |
| Cost index (NY=100) | 106 | 55 | Hungary |
Average wage: OECD (PPP). Tax is an effective single-filer rate at the average wage; cost index is each country's anchor city (Copenhagen / Budapest).
Data signals
What actually separates them
Who keeps more
On the average wage, Denmark leaves the bigger net paycheck — about $17,440 more per year ($40,712 in Denmark vs $23,272 in Hungary, PPP).
Payroll deduction
Hungary takes less off the top: ~34% vs ~45% combined income tax + social security.
Cost of living
Hungary is the cheaper base: cost index 55 vs 106 (Copenhagen / Budapest, New York = 100). Higher net pay doesn't help if rent eats it.
Banking & transfers for either move
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FAQ
- Is the average salary higher in Denmark or Hungary?
- Denmark has the higher OECD average wage: $74,022 in Denmark vs $34,996 in Hungary (PPP-adjusted). But after tax, Denmark keeps more net.
- Where do you take home more after tax?
- Denmark — about $17,440 more net per year on the average wage, once income tax and social security are applied.
- Which is cheaper to live in?
- Hungary, by cost index (Copenhagen 106 vs Budapest 55, NY = 100). Weigh net pay against cost together, not separately.