Employer Cost Calculator — Zimbabwe 2026

Find out the true cost of employing someone in Zimbabwe, including employer NSSA contributions and employee deductions.

Full Cost Breakdown

Gross Salary-
Employer NSSA (3.5%)-
Total Cost to Employer-
PAYE (Income Tax)-
Employee NSSA (3.5%)-
AIDS Levy-
Total Employee Deductions-
Employee Take-Home Pay-
Tax data updated: 2026-03-27 | Year: 2026

Employer Cost Reference Table (USD)

How much does it really cost to employ someone in Zimbabwe? Here's a quick reference:

Gross SalaryEmployer NSSATotal Employer CostEmployee Take-Home

What Makes Up the Employer Cost?

When you employ someone in Zimbabwe, your cost is more than just their salary. Here's what you pay:

  1. Gross Salary — the agreed pay before deductions
  2. Employer NSSA — 3.5% of gross salary (capped at the insurable earnings ceiling). This is paid on top of the salary — it does not come from the employee's pay. See NSSA rates for details.

The employer does not pay PAYE or AIDS levy — those come from the employee's gross salary. However, the employer is responsible for withholding and remitting them to ZIMRA.

What the Employee Receives

From the gross salary, three deductions are made before the employee receives their take-home pay:

See net salary examples at different income levels, or use the salary calculator for a specific amount. Need to work backwards from a desired net? Try the reverse salary calculator.

Monthly vs Annual Employer Cost

To get the annual cost, multiply the monthly total employer cost by 12. If you pay a 13th cheque (bonus), add one extra month of gross salary plus the employer NSSA on that amount.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to employ someone in Zimbabwe?

The total cost is the employee's gross salary plus employer NSSA contributions (3.5% of gross, capped at $365.43). For example, employing someone at $1,000/month costs approximately $1,012.79 per month.

What is the employer NSSA contribution in Zimbabwe?

Employers pay 3.5% of the employee's gross salary, capped at the insurable earnings ceiling ($365.43 USD per month). The maximum employer NSSA is $12.79/month regardless of how high the salary is.

Does the employer pay PAYE or the employee?

PAYE comes from the employee's gross salary — it's the employee's tax. The employer's role is to calculate it, deduct it, and send it to ZIMRA each month.

What is the total employer NSSA contribution for a $2,000 salary?

The employer NSSA is capped. For a $2,000 salary, the employer pays $12.79 (3.5% of the $365.43 cap), not $70 (3.5% of $2,000).

Are there other employer costs besides NSSA?

The mandatory statutory cost is employer NSSA. Some employers also provide medical aid, pension fund top-ups, or housing allowances — but these are not mandatory.