Find out how much tax you'll pay on your bonus or 13th cheque in Zimbabwe.
In Zimbabwe, a bonus (including the 13th cheque) is treated as additional income in the month it is paid. ZIMRA does not tax bonuses at a flat rate — instead:
Because the bonus pushes you into higher tax brackets, the marginal tax rate on the bonus is usually higher than your normal effective rate. Learn how PAYE works step-by-step in our PAYE guide.
Your bonus also attracts NSSA (if combined income exceeds the cap) and AIDS levy (3% of the additional PAYE).
Yes, for tax purposes. The 13th cheque is typically equal to one month's salary paid in December. It is taxed the same way as any other bonus — combined with your December salary before PAYE is calculated.
There is no legal way to avoid PAYE on a bonus in Zimbabwe. However, if your employer spreads the bonus across multiple months, the tax impact may be lower since less income falls into the higher brackets each month. Discuss with your employer or tax advisor.
Use our salary calculator for regular monthly calculations or the reverse calculator to find what gross you need.
A bonus is added to your regular monthly salary. PAYE is calculated on the combined total using progressive tax bands. The difference between this and your normal PAYE is the tax on your bonus.
Yes. A 13th cheque is treated as additional income in the month it is paid and is subject to PAYE, NSSA and AIDS levy.
It depends on your regular salary. Since bonuses push you into higher tax brackets, the marginal rate on the bonus is typically 25-40%.
NSSA applies to the combined income (salary + bonus) but is still capped at the insurable earnings ceiling. If your regular salary already exceeds the cap, no additional NSSA is charged on the bonus.