- Salaires moyens les plus élevés en Europe : Luxembourg (66 000 €), Suisse (78 000 €), Danemark (61 000 €)
- Salaires moyens UE les plus bas : Bulgarie (13 500 €), Roumanie (14 200 €), Lettonie (16 800 €)
- Ajusté à la parité de pouvoir d'achat, l'écart se réduit considérablement
- La technologie, la finance et l'ingénierie paient 40 à 80 % au-dessus des moyennes nationales
- Le salaire annuel brut moyen de l'UE est d'environ 33 500 € (estimation 2026)
Average Salaries Across Europe: Complete Data Table
The table below shows average gross annual salaries for EU member states, along with purchasing power parity (PPP) adjusted figures, minimum wages (where applicable), and the highest-paying sector in each country. Data is sourced from Eurostat, national statistics offices, and EuroSalary market data as of Q1 2026.
| Country | Avg Gross/Year | PPP Adjusted | Min. Wage/Month | Top Sector |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Luxembourg | €66,000 | €52,000 | €2,571 | Finance |
| Denmark | €61,000 | €48,000 | — (collective) | Tech/Pharma |
| Ireland | €52,000 | €40,000 | €2,146 | Tech |
| Netherlands | €51,000 | €41,000 | €1,995 | Tech/Finance |
| Belgium | €49,000 | €40,000 | €1,994 | Pharma |
| Sweden | €48,000 | €40,000 | — (collective) | Tech |
| Germany | €44,000 | €37,000 | €2,054 | Automotive/Tech |
| Finland | €43,000 | €36,000 | — (collective) | Tech/Engineering |
| Austria | €42,000 | €35,000 | — (collective) | Finance |
| France | €40,000 | €34,000 | €1,767 | Consulting/Tech |
| Italy | €32,000 | €28,000 | — (collective) | Fashion/Engineering |
| Spain | €29,000 | €26,000 | €1,323 | Tourism/Finance |
| Portugal | €23,000 | €21,000 | €870 | Tech/Tourism |
| Czech Republic | €21,000 | €22,000 | €773 | Manufacturing |
| Poland | €20,000 | €21,000 | €833 | Tech/Manufacturing |
| Slovakia | €18,500 | €19,000 | €750 | Automotive |
| Hungary | €18,000 | €18,500 | €642 | Manufacturing |
| Croatia | €17,500 | €18,000 | €840 | Tourism |
| Latvia | €16,800 | €17,000 | €700 | IT/Finance |
| Lithuania | €17,200 | €17,500 | €924 | IT |
| Romania | €14,200 | €15,000 | €700 | IT/Manufacturing |
| Bulgaria | €13,500 | €14,000 | €477 | IT |
Sources: Eurostat Structure of Earnings Survey 2024, national statistics bureaus, EuroSalary market data. Figures are gross annual salary estimates for full-time employees. PPP = purchasing power parity adjusted to EU27 average.
Understanding the Data: Why Salaries Differ So Much
The raw salary gap between the highest-paying EU country (Luxembourg at €66,000) and the lowest (Bulgaria at €13,500) looks extreme — nearly a 5:1 ratio. But this figure is deeply misleading without context.
The Purchasing Power Correction
A family earning €13,500 in Sofia, Bulgaria can afford housing, food, transport, and leisure at costs 60-70% lower than equivalent spending in Luxembourg City. The EU's Purchasing Power Standard (PPS) corrects for this, and when applied, the effective ratio narrows to roughly 2.5:1 — still significant, but far less dramatic than the nominal figures suggest.
Productivity and Economic Development
Salary levels track closely with GDP per capita and labour productivity. Countries that transitioned to market economies more recently (post-1989 EU accession countries) are at earlier stages of wage convergence. The EU's cohesion policy explicitly aims to reduce these gaps over time — and it has worked: Polish salaries have tripled in real terms since 2004.
Tax and Social Contribution Systems
Gross salary figures don't tell the full story. Countries with high employer social contributions (France, Belgium) effectively pay workers more in total compensation than gross salary figures suggest. Countries with lower marginal income tax rates (e.g., flat-tax systems in Eastern Europe) leave employees with more take-home pay relative to gross. A €30,000 gross salary in Romania may yield a higher net-of-tax income than the same gross in Germany.
Salaries by Sector: Where the Money Is
Across all EU countries, certain sectors consistently pay significantly above national averages. Understanding these premiums helps you assess whether you're in a high- or low-compensation sector.
| Sector | Premium vs. National Average | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Financial Services | +65-80% | Banking, insurance, fund management |
| Technology/ICT | +55-75% | Software, cloud, cybersecurity |
| Pharmaceutical | +50-70% | R&D, clinical, regulatory affairs |
| Energy | +40-55% | Oil/gas, renewables engineering |
| Engineering | +30-50% | Automotive, aerospace, industrial |
| Consulting | +35-50% | Strategy, management consulting |
| Healthcare (clinical) | +20-40% | Physicians, specialists |
| Education | +0-15% | Varies widely by country |
| Retail | -10 to -20% | Often at or near minimum wage |
| Hospitality | -15 to -25% | Lowest sector in most EU countries |
Salary Trends: How European Pay Has Moved
European wages have been on a significant upward trajectory since 2020, though the path has not been smooth.
2020-2022: Pandemic and Recovery
The COVID-19 pandemic initially suppressed wages in hospitality, retail, and tourism. However, technology, healthcare, and logistics workers saw significant salary increases due to demand surge. Remote work accelerated international talent competition, pushing salaries higher for skilled tech workers across all EU markets.
2022-2024: The Inflation Crisis
Energy price shocks following Russia's invasion of Ukraine drove CPI inflation across the EU to 8-10% in 2022-2023. Workers demanded and largely received above-inflation wage increases. The EU average nominal wage growth hit 5-7% annually in this period, though real wages (inflation-adjusted) fell in many countries in 2022 before recovering in 2023-2024.
2025-2026: Stabilisation
With EU inflation falling back toward the ECB's 2% target, wage growth has moderated. Average nominal wage growth across the EU27 is running at approximately 3-4% in 2025-2026. Real wages have fully recovered their pre-crisis levels in most countries. The technology sector continues to experience above-average wage growth, while traditional industries have seen more modest increases.
Cost of Living Adjusted Rankings
When we account for local purchasing power, the rankings shift significantly. Countries like Portugal, Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania offer a compelling combination of reasonable salaries and low living costs — making them increasingly attractive for both remote workers and local employees when considering overall quality of life.
Use EuroSalary's comparison tools to calculate real purchasing power differences between countries for your specific role:
Questions fréquemment posées
Quel est le salaire moyen en Europe en 2026 ?
Le salaire annuel brut moyen à l'échelle de l'UE en 2026 est d'environ 33 500 €, mais cela varie considérablement selon les pays. Les pays d'Europe occidentale et du Nord ont des moyennes de 40 000 à 65 000 € et plus, tandis que les pays d'Europe centrale et orientale se situent entre 15 000 et 28 000 €.
Quel pays a le salaire moyen le plus élevé en Europe ?
Parmi les États membres de l'UE, le Luxembourg a le salaire annuel brut moyen le plus élevé, à environ 66 000 €. En incluant la Suisse (non-UE), ce chiffre monte à environ 78 000 €.
Quel pays de l'UE a le salaire moyen le plus bas ?
La Bulgarie a le salaire annuel brut moyen le plus bas parmi les États membres de l'UE, à environ 13 500 €, suivie de la Roumanie (14 200 €) et de la Lettonie (16 800 €).
Quel est le salaire moyen en Allemagne ?
Le salaire annuel brut moyen en Allemagne est d'environ 44 000 € en 2026, soit environ 3 667 €/mois brut ou 2 200 à 2 500 €/mois net.
Comment le pouvoir d'achat affecte-t-il les comparaisons salariales ?
Un salaire de 15 000 € en Bulgarie a un pouvoir d'achat réel beaucoup plus élevé que la même somme au Luxembourg ou au Danemark. L'UE utilise le Standard de Pouvoir d'Achat (SPA) pour normaliser ces différences.
Quels secteurs paient le plus en Europe ?
Les services financiers, la technologie et l'industrie pharmaceutique paient systématiquement les salaires les plus élevés, généralement 40 à 80 % au-dessus des moyennes nationales.
Comment les salaires européens ont-ils évolué ces dernières années ?
Les salaires européens ont augmenté de manière significative en 2022-2024 en raison des pressions inflationnistes. En 2025-2026, la croissance des salaires s'est modérée à 2-4 % dans la plupart des pays.