Philippine Salary &
Payroll Calculator
Free, accurate tools to compute your take-home pay, government contributions, taxes, and benefits. Updated for 2026.
Start ComputingQuick Net Salary Check
All Calculators
Choose a calculator below to get started. All tools are free and based on the latest 2026 government rates.
Gross to Net Salary Calculator
Compute your take-home pay after SSS, PhilHealth, Pag-IBIG, and BIR tax deductions.
→SSS Contribution Calculator
Calculate your monthly SSS contribution based on the 2026 contribution table.
→PhilHealth Contribution Calculator
Compute your monthly PhilHealth premium share for 2026.
→Pag-IBIG Contribution Calculator
Calculate your Pag-IBIG Fund monthly contribution.
→BIR Withholding Tax Calculator
Compute your monthly income tax under the TRAIN Law 2026 tax table.
→13th Month Pay Calculator
Calculate your 13th month pay based on basic salary and months worked.
→Overtime & Holiday Pay Calculator
Compute overtime, night differential, and holiday pay rates.
→Final Pay / Separation Pay Calculator
Calculate final pay including leave conversion, pro-rated 13th month, and separation pay.
→Retirement Pay Calculator
Estimate retirement pay under RA 7641 (Retirement Pay Law).
→Minimum Wage Lookup
Find the 2026 daily minimum wage rate for your city or region in the Philippines.
→Wage Distortion Calculator
Compute wage distortion adjustments using NWPC-recognized formulas (Pineda, Bagtas, JODA).
→How Philippine Payroll Works
Mandatory Deductions
Every employed Filipino has three mandatory deductions from their salary: SSS (Social Security System), PhilHealth (Philippine Health Insurance Corporation), and Pag-IBIG (Home Development Mutual Fund). These are shared between the employee and employer.
Income Tax (TRAIN Law)
After mandatory deductions, your remaining taxable income is subject to withholding tax based on the BIR tax table. Under the TRAIN Law, annual income below ₱250,000 is tax-exempt.
13th Month Pay
All rank-and-file employees are entitled to 13th month pay, computed as total basic salary earned during the year divided by 12. The first ₱90,000 is tax-exempt.