Net Salary CHF 60'000 — Married — 1 Child — Old Cross-Border Worker
Full net salary simulation for a cross-border worker earning CHF 60'000 gross — Swiss resident vs Italian cross-border comparison. Updated 2026.
| CH Resident (Permit B) | IT Cross-border (Permit G) | |
|---|---|---|
| Annual gross income | CHF 60'000 | CHF 60'000 |
| Family allowances | CHF 3'000 | CHF 3'000 |
| Social contributions (AVS/AD/LAA/IJM/LPP) | CHF -7'740 | CHF -7'740 |
| Ticino withholding tax | CHF -300 | CHF -300 |
| Health insurance | CHF -12'600 | CHF 0 |
| Annual net income | CHF 42'360 | CHF 54'960 |
| Monthly net income | CHF 3'530 | CHF 4'580 |
How net salary is calculated
With a gross annual income of CHF 60'000, the Swiss employer withholds mandatory social contributions of approximately CHF 7'740: AVS (5.3%), unemployment insurance (1.1%), accident insurance (0.7%), daily sickness allowance (0.8%), and occupational pension LPP. The Ticino withholding tax is calculated using table tableB, resulting in an effective rate of 0.5%.
Tax regime applied
As an old cross-border worker (pre-2024 agreement), taxation is exclusively in Switzerland through withholding tax. No Italian IRPEF declaration is required, with an overall effective rate of 0.5%.
Family situation impact
As a married person with 1 child, tax table B applies with reduced rates. Swiss family allowances amount to CHF 3'000/year.
Border distance zone
Living within 20 km of the Swiss border, 80% of the withholding tax stays in Switzerland and 20% goes to your Italian municipality.
Indicative monthly budget
Monthly, a Swiss resident nets approximately CHF 3'530, while an Italian cross-border worker receives about EUR 5.020/month (at CHF/EUR 1.096).
Practical tips and useful services
To optimize your CHF-EUR conversion, services like Wise or Fineco offer better exchange rates than traditional banks.
Customize this simulation
Customize this simulation →