Net Salary 100000 CHF | Frontaliere Ticino
Net Salary 100000 CHF — free tools and expert guides for cross-border workers (frontalieri) between Switzerland and Italy. Compare salaries, tax, LAMal health insurance, pensions, and cost of living in Ticino. Updated 2026.
By Frontaliere Ticino Editorial Team · Cross-border tax & pension specialists
This salary simulation shows the complete tax breakdown for a cross-border worker at this specific gross income level: Swiss social deductions (AVS 5.3%, unemployment 1.1%, accident insurance, daily sickness benefits), Canton Ticino withholding tax, and Italian IRPEF after the EUR 10,000 franchise under the 2026 New Agreement.
The net salary depends on several key parameters: marital status (tax table A for single, C for married), number of dependent children (each child reduces the withholding tax bracket), work percentage, and distance from the Swiss border (the 20 km rule determines whether the old or new fiscal regime applies).
After viewing the simulation, use the "What If" tool to instantly see how changing one parameter (marriage, child, part-time) affects your net pay. You can also compare the result against actual cross-border living costs using the Cost of Living comparator.
This page is part of Frontaliere Ticino, the reference platform for cross-border workers between Switzerland (Canton Ticino) and Italy. Find practical tools, updated data, and verified information.
Content is designed to help cross-border workers make informed decisions about taxation, pensions, transportation, cost of living, and administrative procedures.
Frequently asked questions
- How is a cross-border worker's net salary calculated in Ticino?
- The net salary depends on Swiss social contributions (AVS/AI/IPG, AC, LPP) and withholding tax in Ticino, plus IRPEF and tax credit in Italy (2026 new agreement).
- What is the difference between old and new cross-border workers (2026 agreement)?
- New cross-border workers (hired after 17/07/2023) have mixed taxation with an exemption and tax credit; old cross-border workers remain under the historical regime with different rules.
- Does the number of children affect the net salary?
- Yes: it can affect deductions/rates and the withholding tax bracket, as well as family allowances and tax deductions.
- Which parameters matter most in the simulation?
- Annual income, marital status, children, distance/residence (within/over 20 km), cross-border worker type, age (LPP) and CHF/EUR exchange rate.
- Does the simulator consider the CHF/EUR exchange rate?
- Yes: you can use the automatic rate or set a custom exchange rate to estimate taxes and net salary also in EUR.