From 2012 the employers’ social security contributions were merged into the new payroll tax, called social contribution tax. This change is of legal nature, the combined rate remains 27% while the revenue is divided among the pension, health care and labour-market funds. In 2017 the social contribution tax decreased to 22%, and in January, 2018 the rate was lowered to 19.5%.
The employer contributions also include a payroll tax: the training levy amounts to 1.5% of gross earnings.
From 1st January 2013, the Job Protection Act (JPA) introduced new targeted reliefs in the employers’ contributions (social contribution tax and training levy) to incentivise the employment of the most disadvantageous groups on the labour market. This measure reduces the standard rate of the employers' contributions up to a cap of HUF 100 000 per month. From 2017 the JPA introduced a permanent reduction of the employers' tax rate by 50% of the current tax rate for:
employees under 25 years of age,
employees over 55 years of age,
employees working in elementary occupations,
employees working in agricultural occupations.
It also introduced temporary reductions (21% in the first two years of the employment, and 50% of the current tax rate in the third year) for:
long term unemployed re-entering the labour market,
people returning to work after child-care leave,
career starters.
From 1st January 2015 the budgetary institutions are not eligible for the JPA tax allowances anymore.
The targeted reliefs in the employers’ contributions are not considered in the Taxing Wages model.
Social security contributions will have to be paid on other benefits than gross earnings (e.g., grants in kind) and payments (e.g., certain kind of contracts).