In Germany, every employee's salary exists at two levels. The gross salary (Bruttogehalt) is the full amount agreed in the employment contract. The net salary (Nettogehalt) is what actually arrives in the employee's bank account after all statutory deductions. When JSJ and German employers quote nursing salaries, the figure given is almost always the gross. The figure you will actually receive — and that determines your actual purchasing power and remittance potential — is the net.
For a nurse earning €3,000 gross, the net take-home is typically €1,900 to €2,000. Understanding this before you arrive prevents financial shock and allows accurate planning.
| Deduction | Rate (Employee Side) | On €3,000 Gross |
|---|---|---|
| Income Tax (Lohnsteuer) | ~15–22% effective (Steuerklasse 1) | ~€440–€550 |
| Health Insurance (Krankenversicherung) | 7.3% | ~€219 |
| Nursing Care Insurance (Pflegeversicherung) | 1.7% | ~€51 |
| Pension Insurance (Rentenversicherung) | 9.3% | ~€279 |
| Unemployment Insurance (Arbeitslosenversicherung) | 1.3% | ~€39 |
| Total deductions | ~35–40% | ~€1,028–€1,138 |
| Net take-home | ~€1,862–€1,972 |
The standard class for single nurses. Income tax is the highest among the classes. Most Indian nurses arriving in Germany without a spouse join under Steuerklasse 1 by default.
If you are married and your spouse is not working, you may be eligible for Steuerklasse 3, which significantly reduces the income tax rate. Moving from Steuerklasse 1 to Steuerklasse 3 can increase monthly net pay by approximately €200 to €300. This requires filing forms with the Finanzamt (tax authority) after registering your address in Germany.
If both you and your spouse are working in Germany, both are typically placed in Steuerklasse 4. Tax rate is the same as Steuerklasse 1 but applied to each spouse individually.
Germany levies a church tax (Kirchensteuer) of 8% to 9% of income tax on members of recognised religious institutions. Registration happens automatically if you indicate religious membership on your Anmeldung (address registration) form.
| Item | Amount (approx.) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | €3,000 | As per employment contract |
| Total deductions | €1,060–€1,140 | Tax + social insurance (Steuerklasse 1) |
| Net take-home | €1,860–€1,940 | Arrives in bank account |
| Rent (shared or employer-provided) | €300–€600 | Varies widely by city and arrangement |
| Food and groceries | €200–€300 | Germany has affordable supermarkets |
| Transport (monthly pass) | €50–€90 | Deutschlandticket available |
| Mobile and internet | €20–€40 | |
| Miscellaneous personal | €100–€150 | |
| Available for savings/remittance | €700–€1,000+ | After all personal expenses |
The savings and remittance potential of €700 to €1,000 per month — after all living expenses in Germany — represents more than the full gross salary of many nurses currently working in India.
500+ nurses are on their way to Germany and Austria with us. Plan with the net salary figure — not the gross — as your working number, and build your monthly budget based on what you will actually receive.
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