N means you got too much money the month before and it got corrected now.
Tiredoftrouble456 on
It could mean „Nachberechnung“. So maybe you paid too little tax or social security in the last months, and now they noticed that so they have to deduct it retrospectively.
ChiefOfMZ on
do you work in a panel installation company?
m4lrik on
From the looks of it they forgot to calculate your obligation for Krankenversicherung (KV) and Pflegeversicherung (PV) potentially because you were in the wrong employee category (for example Werkstudent) or because they thought you were privately insured.
Next month should only be the 300,75 and 649,35 leaving you with a 2050 net wage.
Sayonakidori_88 on
On a German payslip, the letters **“L“** and **“N“** in the *Steuer/Sozialversicherung* (tax/social insurance) section usually stand for:
* **L = Laufendes Entgelt** → the *current monthly salary* (regular wages for that month).
* **N = Neben-/Einmalzahlung** → a *non-regular* payment such as bonuses, holiday pay, or one-off extra wages.
In your screenshot:
* For **L**, we see a *Steuer-Brutto* of **3,000 €** — that’s the normal monthly gross salary.
* For **N**, we see entries like *9,000 € SV-Brutto* — this is a one-off additional amount (likely a bonus or special payment).
This separation is important because **tax and social insurance contributions can be calculated differently** for laufendes (ongoing) vs. einmaliges (one-time) income.
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N means you got too much money the month before and it got corrected now.
It could mean „Nachberechnung“. So maybe you paid too little tax or social security in the last months, and now they noticed that so they have to deduct it retrospectively.
do you work in a panel installation company?
From the looks of it they forgot to calculate your obligation for Krankenversicherung (KV) and Pflegeversicherung (PV) potentially because you were in the wrong employee category (for example Werkstudent) or because they thought you were privately insured.
Next month should only be the 300,75 and 649,35 leaving you with a 2050 net wage.
On a German payslip, the letters **“L“** and **“N“** in the *Steuer/Sozialversicherung* (tax/social insurance) section usually stand for:
* **L = Laufendes Entgelt** → the *current monthly salary* (regular wages for that month).
* **N = Neben-/Einmalzahlung** → a *non-regular* payment such as bonuses, holiday pay, or one-off extra wages.
In your screenshot:
* For **L**, we see a *Steuer-Brutto* of **3,000 €** — that’s the normal monthly gross salary.
* For **N**, we see entries like *9,000 € SV-Brutto* — this is a one-off additional amount (likely a bonus or special payment).
This separation is important because **tax and social insurance contributions can be calculated differently** for laufendes (ongoing) vs. einmaliges (one-time) income.