PAYE Tax Calculator In South Africa For 2024/2025
Our income tax calculator tool helps you easily calculate PAYE in South Africa with accurate SARS PAYE calculator rates. Estimate your tax in seconds, whether you're checking PAYE rates in South Africa or looking for a PAYE calculator monthly update. Ideal for anyone needing a income tax calculator for South Africa or simply learning how to calculate income tax in South Africa. From income tax breakdowns to personalized figures, the calculator gives you everything you need.
Your monthly income of R50 000 falls under the 36.0% tax bracket, resulting in an effective tax rate of 22.6%. After applying tax rebates of R1 436, your net PAYE tax is R11 302. Click below to see the complete breakdown of your tax calculation including all applicable deductions and bracket details.
Understanding PAYE in South Africa
Pay As You Earn (PAYE) is the system used in South Africa where employers deduct income tax from employees’ salaries or wages before paying them.
PAYE applies to all forms of remuneration including salaries, wages, bonuses, overtime pay, allowances and other benefits. The tax is calculated based on progressive tax brackets.
All employers in South Africa are required to register as employers with SARS and deduct PAYE from their employees’ remuneration.
South Africa uses a progressive tax system with the following annual brackets:
Rebates: Primary rebate of R17,235 (under 65), Secondary rebate of R9,444 (65-75), Tertiary rebate of R3,145 (over 75).
Individuals must comply with SARS requirements:
- Register for income tax if earning above the tax threshold
- Submit annual tax returns (unless auto-assessed)
- Declare all income sources including investment income
- Claim applicable deductions and rebates
- Submit returns via eFiling or at a SARS branch
The tax year runs from 1 March to 28/29 February.
Important: Provisional taxpayers must make bi-annual payments and submit additional returns.
Individual Tax Returns
Annual filing deadlines:
Provisional Tax Payments
Late submissions may incur penalties and interest charges.
SARS requires taxpayers to maintain records for 5 years:
- IRP5/IT3(a) certificates from employers
- Medical scheme certificates
- Retirement annuity certificates
- Proof of donations
- Travel logbooks if claiming travel expenses
- All supporting documents for deductions claimed
Tip: Keep digital copies of all tax-related documents in a secure location.
Employers must deduct the following from salaries before PAYE calculation:
- UIF: Unemployment Insurance Fund contributions (1% employee, 1% employer)
- Pension/Provident: Retirement fund contributions (up to 27.5% of remuneration)
- Medical Aid: Contributions to registered medical schemes
These deductions may qualify for tax credits or deductions when filing annual returns.
South African employers must:
- Register as an employer with SARS
- Calculate and deduct correct PAYE amounts
- Submit monthly EMP201 returns
- Pay PAYE, UIF and SDL by the 7th of the following month
- Issue IRP5/IT3(a) certificates annually
- Submit annual EMP501 reconciliation
Penalties: Late submissions or payments incur penalties up to 10% of amount due.
Employers must keep payroll records for 5 years for SARS audits.