Product Manager Salary: Munich vs Stockholm (2026)

Munich pays more — a mid-level Product Manager earns €71,000 in Munich versus €69,000 in Stockholm, a 3% gap.

Estimates based on public benchmarks and modelled data. How we calculate →

Verdict

Munich wins on gross compensation — 3% ahead at mid-level (€71,000 in Munich vs €69,000 in Stockholm). The cities are close enough that cost of living often determines real purchasing power.

Munich

Higher pay
High confidence
Mid-level median€71,000
Typical range€63,000€79,000
Junior (0–2 yrs)€53,000
Mid-level (3–6 yrs)€71,000
Senior (7+ yrs)€95,000
Full Munich salary guide →

Stockholm

Medium confidence
Mid-level median€69,000
Typical range€58,000€70,000
Junior (0–2 yrs)€48,000
Mid-level (3–6 yrs)€69,000
Senior (7+ yrs)€85,000
Full Stockholm salary guide →

Side-by-side: Product Manager bands by seniority

SeniorityMunichStockholmGap
Junior (0–2 yrs)€53,000€48,00010%
Mid-level (3–6 yrs)€71,000€69,0003%
Senior (7+ yrs)€95,000€85,00012%

Gross annual base salary, 2026. Bonuses and equity not included.

About Munich

Across Europe, salaries vary dramatically by country, city, company type, and sector. The numbers below represent a broad European market baseline.

About Stockholm

Stockholm is one of Europe's leading tech hubs, home to Spotify, Klarna, and a dense ecosystem of scale-ups. Salaries are competitive by European standards, though the market is smaller than London or Berlin.

Cost of living: does it close the gap?

Gross salary is only one side of the ledger. Housing typically eats 30–45% of after-tax income in major European cities, with London, Zurich, and Amsterdam at the top end. The 3% gross gap between Munich and Stockholm usually narrows by 30–50% once you adjust for housing and tax — but rarely flips entirely. The higher-paying city almost always wins on absolute take-home, while the lower-paying city often wins on savings rate as a percentage of income.

For a tighter answer, use our partner tools: SpendVerdict — rent comparison and PathVerdict — savings rate.

Frequently asked questions

Which city pays more for a Product Manager, Munich or Stockholm?

Munich pays more — the median Product Manager salary in Munich is 3% higher than in Stockholm. Mid-level medians for 2026 are €71,000 in Munich and €69,000 in Stockholm. The gap widens at senior levels in most cases because tech-heavy markets pay sharper experience premiums.

What is the salary gap between Munich and Stockholm for a Product Manager?

The gross median salary gap between the two cities is approximately 3% (Munich above Stockholm). For a Product Manager with 4–6 years of experience, that translates to roughly €71,000 in Munich versus €69,000 in Stockholm.

Is the gap still meaningful after cost of living?

Cost of living narrows — but rarely closes — the gap. Munich is typically more expensive (especially housing), so net purchasing power differences are usually 30–50% smaller than the gross gap suggests. For Product Managers prioritising savings rate, the lower-cost city often wins. For peak total compensation, the higher-paying city still leads.

What about taxes and take-home pay?

Tax regimes vary significantly across these markets. UK and Irish income tax tops out around 40–48% at typical Product Manager salary levels. Germany and France apply 42% top rates plus high social contributions. Spain and Portugal are similar. Switzerland has lower headline rates but high mandatory health insurance. As a rule of thumb, expect 30–45% of gross to disappear to tax and social charges in any of these cities.

Where should a Product Manager actually move?

If you're optimising for gross compensation, Munich wins outright. If you're optimising for savings rate or quality of life, Stockholm often wins because cost-of-living differences offset most of the salary gap. The right answer depends on your career stage, tax residency goals, and whether you have equity at a remote-first employer that pays the same regardless of location.

How accurate are these 2026 salary comparisons?

Figures are based on public benchmarks (ONS ASHE for UK, Eurostat SES for EU, BLS OEWS for US, plus Levels.fyi cross-referencing for tech roles) and structured modelling. They represent gross annual base salary — bonuses, equity, and benefits are excluded. Confidence varies by role and city; the lower-data combinations show a confidence badge on the page.

Salary estimates are based on public benchmarks and modelled data. They represent gross annual base salary and do not include bonuses, equity, or benefits. Read our methodology →