Netherlands vs Slovenia

Compare PPP-adjusted average wages, long-term wage trends and consumer price levels using consistent OECD data.

Wage data: 2025 · Price data: 2024

Comparison Overview

Netherlands flagNetherlands

Average wage (2025)

$80,136

1-year change
+1.9%
5-year change
−2.0%

Overall price level (2024)

78.4 (United States = 100)

Netherlands's latest PPP-adjusted average wage is approximately 26.4% higher than Slovenia's.

Slovenia flagSlovenia

Average wage (2025)

$63,376

1-year change
+5.5%
5-year change
+12.2%

Overall price level (2024)

59.2 (United States = 100)

Netherlands has the higher latest average wage of the two, by 26.4% on a PPP-adjusted basis. Over five years Slovenia shows the stronger change (+12.2% against −2.0%). Overall consumer prices are higher in Netherlands, at 78.4 against 59.2 on the United States = 100 scale — a gap of +19.2 index points. Both wage figures are for 2025 and the price levels for 2024, so the two economies are read at the same point in each series.

Wage History

See how PPP-adjusted average annual wages have changed in both economies.

PPP-adjusted annual wage (USD)

NetherlandsSlovenia
$40,000$50,000$60,000$70,000$80,000$90,000201520172019202120232025

USD PPP, constant 2025 prices

Wage Key Facts

MetricNetherlandsSlovenia
Latest wage$80,136$63,376
Latest year20252025
1-year change+1.9%+5.5%
5-year change−2.0%+12.2%
10-year change−3.1%+29.4%
Historical peak$83,103$63,376
Peak year20162025
Change from peak−3.6%0.0%

How the Wage Trends Compare

Current Position

Netherlands records the higher figure: $80,136 against $63,376, a gap of 26.4%. A difference of that size is one of the wider ones in this dataset, and it holds after the PPP adjustment has already removed price level differences between the two.

Both figures are for 2025, so this is a like-for-like comparison of the same year rather than of two different latest points.

Both use the same basis: PPP-adjusted US dollars at constant prices. That conversion strips out the price level differences between the two economies, which is what makes the two figures comparable at all — neither is a local-currency salary, and neither is what an employer in that country would write on a contract.

Recent Momentum

Slovenia had the stronger latest year (+5.5% against +1.9%).

Both moved up in the latest year, which leaves the ordering between them unchanged.

Widening the window to five years, the stronger of the two is Slovenia: +12.2% against −2.0%.

This is where the two separate: Netherlands's latest year runs against its own five-year direction, while Slovenia's does not. Short-term and medium-term signals agree for one and conflict for the other.

Long-Term Direction

The ten-year direction splits between them: −3.1% for Netherlands against +29.4% for Slovenia. One long-term series is rising while the other is not, which is a more durable difference than any single year's movement.

Slovenia is at its historical peak in the latest year, while Netherlands sits 3.6% from its high of 2016. One has recovered its previous ground and the other has not.

The long view and the recent one point differently here — the lower-paid of the two has been closing ground over the five-year window, so the current gap understates how the two have been moving relative to each other.

Consumer Price Level Comparison

Compare eight consumer price categories with the United States benchmark of 100.

United States = 100
Missing values are shown as -

All differences are shown in index points. United States = 100.

CategoryNetherlandsSloveniaDifference (NLD − SVN)NLD vs U.S.SVN vs U.S.
Overall78.459.2+19.2−21.6−40.8
Food84.485.6−1.2−15.6−14.4
Clothing82.787.4−4.7−17.3−12.6
Housing73.142.2+30.9−26.9−57.8
Health60.846.5+14.3−39.2−53.5
Transport11991+28.0+19.0−9.0
Recreation9073.4+16.6−10.0−26.6
Restaurants & Accommodation99.273.2+26.0−0.8−26.8
  • Overall

    Netherlands78.4
    Slovenia59.2
    Difference+19.2
    NLD vs U.S.−21.6
    SVN vs U.S.−40.8
  • Food

    Netherlands84.4
    Slovenia85.6
    Difference−1.2
    NLD vs U.S.−15.6
    SVN vs U.S.−14.4
  • Clothing

    Netherlands82.7
    Slovenia87.4
    Difference−4.7
    NLD vs U.S.−17.3
    SVN vs U.S.−12.6
  • Housing

    Netherlands73.1
    Slovenia42.2
    Difference+30.9
    NLD vs U.S.−26.9
    SVN vs U.S.−57.8
  • Health

    Netherlands60.8
    Slovenia46.5
    Difference+14.3
    NLD vs U.S.−39.2
    SVN vs U.S.−53.5
  • Transport

    Netherlands119
    Slovenia91
    Difference+28.0
    NLD vs U.S.+19.0
    SVN vs U.S.−9.0
  • Recreation

    Netherlands90
    Slovenia73.4
    Difference+16.6
    NLD vs U.S.−10.0
    SVN vs U.S.−26.6
  • Restaurants & Accommodation

    Netherlands99.2
    Slovenia73.2
    Difference+26.0
    NLD vs U.S.−0.8
    SVN vs U.S.−26.8

Netherlands and Slovenia in Detail

Current Wage Position

Netherlands reports a PPP-adjusted average annual wage of $80,136 for 2025, and Slovenia $63,376 for 2025. That puts Netherlands ahead by 26.4%.

Both figures are PPP-adjusted: converted using purchasing power parities rather than market exchange rates, and expressed in constant prices so different years stay comparable.

This matters for reading the gap. A market-rate conversion would move with currency markets and would not reflect what the money buys in each economy. These figures are built to compare purchasing power, not to tell you what a currency transfer would be worth.

Recent Wage Momentum

In the latest reported year Netherlands changed by +1.9% and Slovenia by +5.5%. A single year is a narrow window, so it is worth reading alongside the five-year figure rather than on its own.

Over five years, Slovenia records the larger change at +12.2%, against −2.0% for Netherlands. That is the difference in how far each series has travelled over the medium term, in real PPP-adjusted terms.

Short-term and five-year movement point the same way for both economies, so neither is currently being pulled against its own medium-term direction.

Long-Term Wage Direction

Across ten years the changes are −3.1% for Netherlands and +29.4% for Slovenia. This is the longest horizon the data covers, and it is the one least affected by any single year's movement.

Netherlands reached its highest recorded value of $83,103 in 2016, and the latest figure sits 3.6% from that high.

Slovenia peaked at $63,376 in 2025, leaving its latest value 0.0% away from that point.

Over the long run the two point in opposite directions. That is the clearest structural difference between these series, and it matters more for reading them than any single year's change does.

Consumer Price Profile

Against the United States benchmark of 100, overall consumption sits at 78.4 in Netherlands and 59.2 in Slovenia — +19.2 index points apart.

The categories that separate them most are Housing (+30.9) and Transport (+28.0).

Food is where they are nearest, at 84.4 and 85.6.

Across the categories with data, Netherlands is the more expensive of the two more often than not.

How to Interpret the Comparison

These are average wages, not median wages, and not take-home pay. An average is pulled by the whole distribution, so it does not describe a typical individual, occupation, city or employer in either economy.

The wage figures are already PPP-adjusted and in constant prices. They are not local-currency salaries and not amounts convertible at a market exchange rate.

The price levels are relative indices against United States = 100. They describe how price levels compare, not what a household actually spends.

Wages and price levels should not be combined into a verdict on which country is better. This page is for understanding how the two wage trends and price structures differ — nothing further follows from it.

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Latest data check

May 15, 2025