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stufix2000
2 years ago

So you can’t answer the question and pay net here not compare with those in the USA.

  • There are regional differences in tax. In some areas they are similar to in Germany
  • in Germany you paid the important insurance for net salary. Not in the USA.
  • The school of the kids is also paid in D
  • Food is more expensive in the USA.
  • you should be allowed to work in the USA first. Work visas are not easy to get. The Greencard does not.
stufix2000
2 years ago
Reply to  deinFragebaer

This depends on where you live and work.
Then you need to look for the cost of living and the specific state tax from this region.
Then whether your AG offers a KV, etc.

This is all much more transparent to the USA.

stufix2000
2 years ago

You can’t answer such a question for Germany. There are also differences in taxation, cost of living and renting.
At €70,000, it lives differently in Munich than in Kiel.

anTTraXX
2 years ago

This depends on where you go and how health insurance is regulated. but the 60-80,000€ colpotted here are basically not wrong.

tinalisatina
2 years ago

Taxes alone are hardly decisive. It also depends on whether you

a) may even emigrate there
b) find a job
c) the payment of the job
d) the region/city in which you want to move/study; there are extremely large differences in costs

Social benefits such as health insurance, pension, education for children … should also be considered.

MrBlack771
2 years ago

It is difficult to estimate, as the cost of living there is much higher. In addition, you have to pay (or should you) insurance yourself, which are state-of-the-art. I think from €60,000 – €80,000 a year it might be worth living there.