COUNTRY COMPARISON · UPDATED 2026-07-15

Latvia vs Spain: taxes, salary and cost of living

Latvia and Spain present two different cost profiles: the first question is whether the salary gap compensates for housing and daily expenses.

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Latvia vs Spain at a glance

Headline fiscal references and locally maintained comparison records, updated 2026-07-15
IndicatorLatviaSpain
Standard VAT21%21%
Income tax25.5-33%19-47%
Social contributions34.09%36.25%
Tax burden42.3%39.5%
Average monthly salary€1,600€2,642
Studio rent€460€950
Monthly food estimate€280€320
Gasoline1.61 €/L1.57 €/L
Electricity0.21 €/kWh0.24 €/kWh

Income comparison in context

Spain records the higher listed monthly salary. The gap is €1,042, approximately 39.4% relative to the lower figure. Within the numeric EuroCosts sample, Latvia ranks 21 of 27 for salary and Spain ranks 13 of 27. The nominal advantage should be tested against local housing before it is treated as additional purchasing power.

Rent, food and the monthly budget

Latvia has the lower listed studio rent by €490, a 51.6% difference relative to the higher rent. Latvia sits 8 of 37 and Spain 28 of 37 in the available low-to-high rent ranking. Latvia also has the lower food estimate, so the housing result is reinforced by groceries.

After subtracting only the listed rent and food estimates, the simplified remainder is €860 in Latvia and €1,372 in Spain. This leaves €512 more in Spain, before utilities, transport, healthcare, childcare or personal taxes not already reflected in salary.

Headline taxation: what differs

Spain has the lower listed tax burden by 2.8 percentage points. Standard VAT is 21% in Latvia versus 21% in Spain. Effective taxation depends on income level and household circumstances.

A practical transport check

Spain has the lower listed gasoline price by €0.04 per litre. For a driver buying 50 litres a month, that headline difference is about €2 monthly, before insurance, parking and road charges.

Who may prefer each country?

For Latvia and Spain, short stays are influenced heavily by rent and restaurant prices; permanent relocation adds payroll, healthcare and administrative costs. These figures work best as a shortlist, not a final decision model.

The most useful conclusion

Spain produces the stronger simplified monthly remainder in this dataset, while Latvia leads on listed rent. The trade-off is more informative than a blanket cheapest-country label.

Sources and data references

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