Greece is a converging labour market in which pay sits below the western average but has been climbing quickly as the economy develops. Pay here is denominated in the euro. For job seekers, foreign workers, skilled migrants, recruiters and employers, understanding how pay actually works — the gap between gross and net, the way the minimum is set, and the tax burden that shapes take-home income — is essential before accepting an offer or planning a move.
This guide brings together official and reputable data, including Eurostat and the OECD where available alongside national statistics, to explain what people earn in Greece, how much they keep after tax, and how pay differs by profession, sector and region. The aim is to give you reliable numbers and the context that makes them meaningful, whether you are benchmarking a single offer or comparing whole countries.
Salaries, tax thresholds and minimum wages change every year, so treat the figures here as well-grounded benchmarks rather than live quotations, and confirm the latest official rates before making a financial or relocation decision.
Greece sits among the EU's lower-paying members, with a 2024 full-time average of around €18,000 a year and average gross monthly pay broadly in the €1,300 to €1,500 range. Wages were hit hard by the debt crisis and have only gradually recovered.
Two adjustments turn a headline number into something meaningful. The first is the difference between the mean and the median: the mean (simple average) is pulled upward by a relatively small number of high earners, while the median — the midpoint where half of workers earn more and half less — is usually the better guide to ordinary experience. The second is the gap between gross and net pay, which tax and social contributions open up and which is covered in detail below.
When you compare your own pay against a benchmark, always confirm whether a figure is gross or net, mean or median, and monthly or annual, because each distinction can move the number by a wide margin.
The distance between the mean and the median in Greece reflects how steeply pay climbs toward the top of the distribution. A salary near the median places you broadly in the middle of the workforce; earning meaningfully above it puts you in the better-paid half, and the highest salaries — in specialist, senior and management roles — sit well clear of the typical worker.
Earnings rise with qualifications, seniority and the choice of sector, and the best-paid work concentrates in Greece's largest cities and most productive industries. For practical benchmarking, anchor on the median rather than the mean, and read any salary in light of the role, the sector and the location rather than the headline figure alone.
The single most important distinction in any pay comparison is between gross pay — the headline figure in a contract or advertisement — and net pay, the take-home amount that actually reaches your bank account. In Greece, Greece applies a progressive income tax plus solidarity contributions in some cases and significant social security contributions, with reforms aimed at easing the burden on workers.
Employers also bear social-security and payroll costs on top of the gross salary, which never appear on the payslip but form part of the true cost of employment; economists call the whole burden the tax wedge. The larger that wedge, the further net pay falls below the gross headline, which is why two countries with similar gross salaries can deliver very different take-home pay.
Because the gross-to-net gap depends on personal circumstances — marital status, children and available reliefs — the reliable way to estimate take-home pay is a local net-salary calculator or an employer estimate. When comparing a Greece offer with one elsewhere, convert both to net monthly pay first, then weigh that against local living costs.
Greece's statutory minimum wage cleared €968 gross per month in early 2025 and, like Spain and Portugal, is paid over 14 instalments a year; it has been rising as the economy recovers.
As an EU member, this country also sets higher salary thresholds for skilled-migration routes such as the EU Blue Card, which tie eligibility directly to the kind of figures in this guide; where a sectoral collective agreement requires more than the legal minimum, the higher figure applies.
For foreign workers, the minimum-pay framework guarantees a legal floor regardless of nationality, and understanding which rate or agreement applies to a given role is the first step in checking that an offer is both fair and compliant.
Salaries are commonly paid over 14 instalments, with extra payments traditionally made at holidays, though public-sector bonus structures have changed since the crisis.
Always confirm how a quoted salary is structured — whether it is a base monthly figure, an annual total, or spread across extra payments — before comparing offers, because the same headline number can mean different annual pay depending on the structure.
Pay in Greece varies widely by occupation, following a hierarchy familiar across Europe. The better-paid fields include shipping and maritime, tourism management, technology, finance and energy, which command premiums for scarce skills, long training or high responsibility.
At the lower end, tourism, hospitality, retail and agriculture pay considerably less, often at or near the relevant minimum, and frequently involve seasonal or part-time work that reduces annual earnings further.
Within every field, pay rises with experience: entry-level roles start near the bottom of their grade, while experienced specialists and managers earn multiples of starting pay. Qualifications, technical and language skills, and a track record in a high-demand area are the levers that move a worker up this ladder.
For those optimising for income, the best-paid paths in Greece concentrate in shipping and maritime, tourism management, technology, finance and energy. Athens, the capital, and Thessaloniki concentrate the best-paid roles in services, shipping, finance and a growing technology sector; tourism dominates the islands and coastal regions, with seasonal pay.
Seniority, specialisation and qualifications drive the steepest premiums, and large or internationally oriented employers generally pay more than small local firms, often adding bonuses and benefits on top of base salary.
For internationally mobile professionals, the route to top pay is the familiar intersection of a high-value field, strong and recognised qualifications, and a leading-city location — then converting that gross salary into strong net income by paying close attention to the local tax treatment and to living costs.
The lowest-paying work in Greece is found largely in tourism, hospitality, retail and agriculture, where many roles sit at or near the minimum and part-time or seasonal patterns are common.
These jobs are nonetheless protected by the minimum-pay framework, and the routes upward are the same everywhere: gaining qualifications, moving into skilled or specialist roles, accumulating the seniority that pay scales reward, and relocating toward higher-paying regions. A strong wage floor and, in many countries, social support mean lower-paid work is often more secure than the raw figures alone suggest.
Athens, the capital, and Thessaloniki concentrate the best-paid roles in services, shipping, finance and a growing technology sector; tourism dominates the islands and coastal regions, with seasonal pay.
The decisive caveat is always cost of living, above all housing: the highest-paying cities are usually also the most expensive, so their pay advantage is partly eroded once rent is taken into account. The figure that matters for any relocation is net pay minus realistic local costs, not the headline salary, and a lower-cost region can sometimes deliver better real disposable income than a higher-paying but pricier one.
Greece's tax and social-security system shapes take-home pay directly. Greece applies a progressive income tax plus solidarity contributions in some cases and significant social security contributions, with reforms aimed at easing the burden on workers.
Social contributions typically fund pensions, healthcare and unemployment protection, with both employees and employers contributing; the combined burden is what determines how much of an employer's total spending ends up in the worker's pocket. Higher earners generally keep a smaller share of each additional unit of pay where the income tax is progressive.
A range of deductions and allowances — for families, children, commuting and certain expenses — can reduce the burden, and many countries allow an annual reconciliation through which workers reclaim overpaid tax. Because the rules turn on personal circumstances, a local calculator gives the most accurate estimate of net pay.
Bringing tax and contributions together, take-home pay in Greece is meaningfully lower than the gross headline, with the exact share depending on income level and household circumstances. The net proportion is generally more favourable at lower incomes, where allowances lighten the burden, and tighter at higher incomes where progressive taxation bites.
Households often do better than single earners thanks to family-related reliefs and child benefits, which can lift net income well above what a single-worker benchmark suggests. For budgeting, the practical approach is to calculate net pay for your specific situation, treat any bonuses or extra payments as supplementary, and weigh the regular monthly net against local living costs — above all rent.
The cost of living is below the EU average, and the climate and lifestyle are a significant draw, though wages remain modest.
Housing is almost always the largest single cost and the biggest regional variable, so the same salary can feel generous in one city and stretched in another. Everyday essentials, transport and services add to the picture, while access to public healthcare and education can materially change how far net pay goes.
For newcomers, the sensible approach is to estimate net monthly pay for the specific job and region, subtract realistic local costs, and judge the surplus — rather than comparing headline salaries across countries, which can be badly misleading once prices are taken into account.
Like most EU countries, Greece records a gender pay gap, driven largely by occupational segregation, higher rates of part-time work among women, and under-representation in the best-paid senior and technical roles. The adjusted, like-for-like gap is smaller than the raw headline figure but still present.
The gap is narrowing, supported by the EU pay-transparency directive and national equality measures that require larger employers to measure and address pay differences. Greater transparency around pay scales tends to strengthen workers' position in negotiation.
As an EU member, Greece participates in the EU Blue Card scheme; it has also introduced digital-nomad and golden-visa routes, and tourism recruits seasonal foreign workers.
Skilled foreign workers in shortage and high-value fields can generally expect to earn at or above the local average, particularly with recognised qualifications. Net pay matters more than gross, so the tax-and-contribution picture should be modelled carefully, and the value of any bonuses or extra payments counted in full.
Language ability often widens opportunities considerably, and recognition of foreign qualifications can affect both pay grade and visa eligibility, so it is worth resolving early. Weighed against living costs and quality of life, the headline salary is only the starting point of a sound relocation decision.
Wages are recovering as the economy stabilises and grows, with rising minimum wages and a developing technology sector, though Greece remains below the EU average.
Demographics are a powerful underlying force: ageing populations and shortages of qualified labour in healthcare, technical trades and skilled professions tend to push pay up in the affected fields and to sustain demand for foreign workers across much of Europe.
As across the continent, artificial intelligence and automation are reshaping the mix of tasks within many roles, rewarding workers who combine domain expertise with digital and technical skills while pressuring more routine work. The surest route to strong, rising pay remains positioning in a high-demand field and building scarce, in-demand qualifications.
Greece sits among the EU's lower-paying members, with a 2024 full-time average of around €18,000 a year and average gross monthly pay broadly in the €1,300 to €1,500 range. Wages were hit hard by the debt crisis and have only gradually recovered.
Net pay in Greece is lower than gross once income tax and social contributions are deducted, with the share depending on income level and family circumstances — generally more favourable at lower incomes and tighter as earnings rise. Use a local net-salary calculator for an accurate estimate, and always compare offers on a net rather than gross basis, since the gap can be substantial.
Greece's statutory minimum wage cleared €968 gross per month in early 2025 and, like Spain and Portugal, is paid over 14 instalments a year; it has been rising as the economy recovers.
The best-paid fields in Greece include shipping and maritime, tourism management, technology, finance and energy. Seniority, specialisation and recognised qualifications drive the highest pay, and large or internationally oriented employers generally pay more than small local firms, often adding bonuses and benefits on top of base salary.
The lowest-paying work in Greece is found largely in tourism, hospitality, retail and agriculture, typically at or near the minimum and often seasonal or part-time. These roles are protected by the minimum-pay framework, and qualifications, skilled roles and seniority are the main routes to higher earnings.
A salary meaningfully above the local median signals a well-paid role in Greece. What counts as 'good' also depends on the city and household size, since the highest-paying areas usually carry the highest living costs — so net pay should always be weighed against local rent and prices.
Greece applies a progressive income tax plus solidarity contributions in some cases and significant social security contributions, with reforms aimed at easing the burden on workers.
The cost of living is below the EU average, and the climate and lifestyle are a significant draw, though wages remain modest.
Athens, the capital, and Thessaloniki concentrate the best-paid roles in services, shipping, finance and a growing technology sector; tourism dominates the islands and coastal regions, with seasonal pay.
As an EU member, Greece participates in the EU Blue Card scheme; it has also introduced digital-nomad and golden-visa routes, and tourism recruits seasonal foreign workers.
Skilled workers in shortage and high-value fields in Greece can generally expect to earn at or above the local average, especially with recognised qualifications and in-demand technical, professional or language skills. Net pay and living costs matter more for real living standards than the gross headline figure.
Wages are recovering as the economy stabilises and grows, with rising minimum wages and a developing technology sector, though Greece remains below the EU average.
Job offers in Greece are usually quoted in gross terms, but what matters for daily life is the net figure after tax and social contributions. Always confirm whether a quoted salary is gross or net, and monthly or annual, and whether it includes any bonuses or extra payments, before comparing.
Athens, the capital, and Thessaloniki concentrate the best-paid roles in services, shipping, finance and a growing technology sector; tourism dominates the islands and coastal regions, with seasonal pay.
Take-home pay in Greece depends on the gross salary, income tax, social contributions and any family-related reliefs or allowances. The net share is generally more favourable at lower incomes and tighter as earnings rise, so a local calculator that reflects your circumstances gives the most accurate estimate.
This Greece salary guide is part of AtoZSerwisPlus.com's broader European salary and labour market research. For the continent-wide picture and to see how Greece compares with its neighbours, start with our pillar guide to Salary in Europe, which covers average pay, minimum wages, take-home income and salary trends across 45 countries.
To compare Greece with nearby economies, see our guides to Salary in Italy and Salary in Cyprus.
For the practical side of working in Greece, pair this guide with our Greece cost of living, job outlook and work permit and visa pages, which explain the salary thresholds that determine eligibility for foreign workers. Together these resources position AtoZSerwisPlus.com as a complete European salary platform.
Figures in this guide draw on official and reputable sources, including Eurostat and the OECD where available, alongside national statistics. Salaries, tax thresholds, social security rates and minimum wages change regularly, so always confirm the latest official figures before making financial or relocation decisions.
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