Understanding PAYE Tax Rates and KiwiSaver Deductions

Your bracket sets your income tax — but your tax code and your KiwiSaver choice decide what actually leaves your pay. Get them wrong and you could be owed money.

Find out if you’re owed a tax refund →The wrong code often means an overpayment

PAYE: how your employer works out the deduction

PAYE (Pay As You Earn) is the system your employer uses to deduct income tax before you’re paid. They don’t guess — they apply your tax code to the official brackets and send the tax straight to Inland Revenue. For most salaried Kiwis this means you never file a return at all.

The catch is the tax code itself. The main ones:

CodeWhen it applies
MYour main or highest source of income
MEMain income, and you qualify for the Independent Earner Tax Credit
SB / S / SH / STSecondary income — rate depends on your total combined earnings

Using the wrong secondary code is the single most common reason for a year-end surprise. Pick a code that’s too low and you’ll owe; too high and you’ve handed Inland Revenue an interest-free loan all year.

The ACC earner’s levy nobody mentions

On top of PAYE, every earner pays the ACC earner’s levy — 1.67% of gross earnings for 2025/2026, up to an earnings cap of $152,790. It funds the accident compensation scheme and shows as a separate line on your payslip. It’s not optional and it’s easy to forget when you’re estimating your take-home.

KiwiSaver: the deduction that’s secretly a pay rise

KiwiSaver looks like just another deduction, but it behaves differently from tax. Your contribution (3%, 4%, 6%, 8% or 10% of gross pay) leaves your pay — but two things flow back in:

Employer contribution: at least 3% of your pay, paid on top of your salary — not from it.
Government contribution: 25c for every $1 you contribute, up to a set annual maximum.

That’s why dropping your KiwiSaver rate to lift your take-home is rarely the win it looks like — you’re walking away from the employer match and the government top-up. The bigger lever isn’t the rate; it’s where your KiwiSaver fund is invested. The difference between a default conservative fund and a growth fund among the main KiwiSaver funds can be enormous over a working life.

Many people review their provider once and never again. Comparing the managed funds and investment funds offered by the big NZ providers and banks — fees, fund type, long-run returns — is one of the highest-value hours you can spend on your retirement savings. The right growth fund can outpace a default fund by six figures over decades.

So if PAYE is automatic, ACC is fixed, and KiwiSaver is largely your choice — where does the money you’ve overpaid actually go? More importantly, how do you get it back? That’s the one step most Kiwis never take.

Find out if you’re owed a refund →How to check your tax assessment Re-run your numbers with a new KiwiSaver rate →See how each rate changes your take-home
Disclaimer: General information about PAYE, the ACC earner’s levy and KiwiSaver for the 2025/2026 NZ tax year. Not personal financial, investment or tax advice. KiwiSaver fund choices carry risk and past returns are not a guarantee of future performance. Confirm your situation with Inland Revenue, your KiwiSaver provider or a licensed adviser.