Understanding Cost to Company (CTC) in South Africa
Cost to Company (CTC) is the total amount an employer spends to employ you. It goes beyond your basic salary to include statutory contributions like UIF and SDL, as well as benefits such as pension fund contributions and medical aid. When you see a job offer quoting a CTC figure, it's important to understand that your take-home pay will be significantly less.
In South Africa, employers must contribute 1% of salary to UIF (capped at R177.12/month) and 1% of total payroll to SDL (Skills Development Levy) if their annual payroll exceeds R500,000. On top of these, most employers contribute to a pension or provident fund (typically 5โ10% of salary) and may subsidise medical aid.
To calculate your net pay from a CTC figure, you first subtract all employer costs to determine your basic salary, then subtract employee deductions (PAYE tax, employee UIF, and employee pension contributions). Typically, take-home pay ranges from 60% to 75% of CTC depending on the structure and your tax bracket.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Cost to Company (CTC) include?
CTC includes your basic salary plus all employer contributions: employer UIF (1%, max R177.12/month), SDL (1%), employer pension/provident fund contributions, employer medical aid contributions, and any other benefits such as car or travel allowances.
How do I convert CTC to net pay?
Subtract employer costs (UIF, SDL, pension, medical aid) from CTC to get your basic salary. Then subtract employee deductions (PAYE tax, employee UIF, employee pension) to arrive at your take-home pay. Our calculator does this automatically.
What's the difference between CTC and gross salary?
Gross salary is what appears on your payslip before employee deductions. CTC is higher because it also includes employer-side costs like employer UIF, SDL, employer pension, and medical aid that you never see on your payslip.
What is SDL?
SDL (Skills Development Levy) is 1% of total payroll paid by employers with annual payroll exceeding R500,000. It funds training programmes through SETAs and the National Skills Fund. It's an employer cost included in CTC but not deducted from your salary.
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