Hire in Liechtenstein

Insights Globais

Hire in Liechtenstein

Liechtenstein hiring execution generally depends on clean labour-law review, accurate working-time control, and disciplined AHV/IV/FAK/ALV contribution setup. Employers should align registration, payroll, and leave handling before local onboarding.

13 de agosto de 2025
Voltar para insights globais

Operational snapshot

Hire in Liechtenstein

Liechtenstein hiring execution generally depends on clean labour-law review, accurate working-time control, and disciplined AHV/IV/FAK/ALV contribution setup. Employers should align registration, payroll, and leave handling before local onboarding.

Capital

Vaduz

Payroll cycle

Monthly

Employer contribution

12.5%

Languages

German

Moeda

Swiss Franc (CHF)

Last reviewed

23 de março de 2026

Employment and compliance summary

Employer cost and contributions

Employer planning should include salary commitments, social-insurance contributions, and paid-time-off exposure together rather than treating them as separate workflows. Budget assumptions...

  • Employer planning should include salary commitments, social-insurance contributions, and paid-time-off exposure together rather than treating them as separate workflows.
  • Budget assumptions should be checked against local working-time rules, contribution rates, and end-of-employment obligations.

Payroll and tax operations

Payroll should be configured for local deductions, employer contributions, and defensible worker records from the first cycle. Employers should verify pay timing, contribution handling, and...

  • Payroll should be configured for local deductions, employer contributions, and defensible worker records from the first cycle.
  • Employers should verify pay timing, contribution handling, and onboarding documents before launching payroll locally.

Leave and holiday rules

Leave balances and rest-time administration should stay aligned with labour-law requirements and internal attendance records. Holiday treatment should be reviewed before role changes,...

  • Leave balances and rest-time administration should stay aligned with labour-law requirements and internal attendance records.
  • Holiday treatment should be reviewed before role changes, absence events, or final settlement.

Termination and notice

Employment exits should be checked against labour-law process, notice handling, and supporting documentation before execution. Final pay, unused leave, and contribution administration should...

  • Employment exits should be checked against labour-law process, notice handling, and supporting documentation before execution.
  • Final pay, unused leave, and contribution administration should be reviewed together before an exit is finalized.

Minimum Wage

Liechtenstein does not have a statutory minimum wage set by law. Instead, wages are usually determined through collective bargaining agreements (CBAs) between employers and trade unions or by individual employment contracts. Despite the lack of a legal minimum wage, salary levels in Liechtenstein tend to be relatively high, reflecting the country’s affluent economy and high living standards.

Income Tax

Income tax in Liechtenstein is progressive and includes both national rates and communal surcharges, typically ranging from about 1% to 8% plus local surcharges, depending on the municipality. Effective tax rates remain quite low compared to many European countries. For instance, a married couple with two children earning CHF 200,000 might face an effective tax rate around 6.5%, while a single taxpayer on the same income could have a rate near 10.1%. However, data from other sources indicates the overall personal income tax rate stands around 22.4% as an estimate, considering all factors and surcharges.

Payroll Cost

Employers in Liechtenstein must contribute payroll taxes and social security contributions alongside gross salaries. The employer’s share typically amounts to about 12.5% of the employee’s gross salary. This total includes:

  • 9.6% for old age, survivors’, and disability insurance
  • 1.9% for the family compensation fund
  • 1% unemployment insurance
  • 0.1% occupational accident insurance
    Additionally, employers share pension scheme contributions, usually half of the total pension cost.

Overtime Pay

Overtime in Liechtenstein must be compensated at a premium rate. The standard practice is to pay at least 25% above the employee’s normal hourly wage for overtime hours. Some collective agreements or contracts may provide for higher rates. Alternatively, compensatory time off may be granted.

Liechtenstein Pay & Tax Components

ComponentDetails
Minimum WageNo statutory minimum wage; wages set by CBAs or contracts; salaries are generally high
Income Tax RatesProgressive 1% to 8% plus communal surcharges; overall around 22.4% effective rate
Employer Payroll CostApproximately 12.5% of gross salary (social security, family fund, unemployment, etc.)
Overtime PayTypically 125% of regular hourly wage or time off in lieu

Key Pay & Tax Elements in Liechtenstein Hiring

Last reviewed

23 de março de 2026

Sources

Reviewed by PIO Compliance Research Team against public labor, payroll tax, social contribution, leave, termination, and employer compliance references available for Liechtenstein as of the review date.

Referenced sources

Public Labour Law
Labor authorityJurisdiction: Liechtenstein
Open source

Publisher

Liechtenstein National Administration

Checked

24 de março de 2026

A PIO torna a contratação transfronteiriça simples e eficiente.

+

Equipe de serviço global

+

Contagem de clientes globais

+

Pessoas na plataforma