Is 6000 €/month a Good Salary in Italy?
This is a high income by Italy standards — roughly the top 10% of full-time earners.
A gross salary of this level in Italy sits around the 92th percentile — high income for the country. After estimated tax, take-home is roughly 41,567 EUR/year.
How it stacks up in Italy
What this salary means in practice
Comfortably supports a family across Italy, including in higher-cost cities like Milan, with meaningful savings on top.
Savings rates of 25–40% of net are common at this income level — wealth-building accelerates here.
Housing affordability is comfortable nearly everywhere — even Milan rent is a small share of net pay.
In Milan, costs run roughly 30% above the national baseline — so the same salary feels meaningfully different than it does in Bari.
What earners at this level can usually afford
Realistic in most cities
Affordable with monthly budgeting
Comfortable to plan annually
Comfortably affordable
Mortgage-ready in most regions
Realistic with disciplined budgeting
Available in prime neighbourhoods
Adjust the numbers
Try a different country or amount to see how the verdict shifts.
Compared against Milan cost-of-living baseline. Estimates only — not financial advice.
Other Italy salary verdicts
Go deeper
In Italy, 6000 €/month is in the top earner band nationally — about 140% above the median. After ~42% in income tax and social contributions, take-home is around 3464 €/month (41.567 €/year). Living costs in Milan run noticeably higher than the national average, so the same paycheck stretches further in smaller cities.
- Well above national median
- Comfortable for single person
- Workable for family of 4
- Moderate housing pressure
- Strong savings potential
- High tax burden
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Common questions
Last updated: 2026. Verdict uses simplified national statistics. Estimates only — not financial advice.