🌍 190+ Countries · 50+ Job Categories · Free Forever

SalaryScope — See Where
You Stand. Worldwide.

Enter your salary. Instantly discover your global income percentile, compare across countries, and see your real purchasing power.

Quick examples:

Global Salary Milestones (USD)

Global Median
$4,915
Top 25%
$12,217
Top 10%
$27,725
Top 5%
$45,277
Top 1%
$113,615

* Based on ILO log-normal wage distribution model

190+

Countries

50+

Job Types

3.4B

Workers

Everything you need to understand your salary

Powered by World Bank, ILO, and IMF data. Updated annually.

190+ Countries

Compare against every country in the world with real data.

Global Percentile

See exactly where you rank among 3.4 billion workers worldwide.

Tax Calculator

Estimate take-home pay for 20+ countries with full tax brackets.

PPP Adjusted

Purchasing power comparison — what your money truly buys.

Instant Results

No sign-up, no waiting. Calculate in under a second.

Data Sources

World Bank, ILO & IMF data. Updated annually.

Global Salary Rankings

Discover which countries and careers pay the most worldwide.

Salary Data by Country

Frequently Asked Questions

How is the global salary percentile calculated?

We use ILO (International Labour Organization) wage distribution data combined with a log-normal statistical model. Your salary is converted to USD and compared against the estimated global workforce distribution across 190+ countries.

What is PPP (Purchasing Power Parity)?

PPP adjusts salaries to reflect what your money can actually buy in different countries. For example, $50,000 in a high cost-of-living city like Zurich buys less than in a lower cost city. PPP lets you compare real standards of living, not just nominal amounts.

How accurate is the tax calculator?

Our tax calculator uses current official tax brackets for 20+ countries. However, actual taxes depend on many factors including deductions, family status, and local/state taxes. Use these estimates for general planning only.

What does 'earning more than X% of the world' mean?

It means your annual salary, converted to USD, is higher than that percentage of the global working population. The global workforce includes approximately 3.4 billion workers across all income levels.

Where does the data come from?

We use public datasets from the World Bank (GDP per capita, GNI), the International Labour Organization (mean/median wages), and the IMF (PPP conversion factors). Data is typically 1-2 years behind the current year.