How it works
How Hazard Pay (Periculosidade) calculadora solves the problem
If you want a periculosidade calculadora without the sales pitch, the Hazard Pay (Periculosidade) calculadora keeps the maths honest and the steps visible, the way a spreadsheet would if you'd built it yourself.
The people who ship Hazard Pay (Periculosidade) calculadora are the same ones who had to look up a periculosidade calculadora on deadline and hated the result. This is the version they wanted to find.
A 10-minute reality check before the payslip arrives beats a formal complaint later. Grab your latest payslip — then work it out and the rest of this page explains what the answer means.
Apply the 30% Brazilian hazard-pay bonus on the base salary for workers exposed to specific risks per NR-16.
On this page you will see Periculosidade and NR-16 treated as first-class terms — each one is linked to the calculators and references that use it, so you can follow the thread without retyping queries into a search bar.
If it helps, jump straight to the Employment hub or compare with the Unhealthy Work Bonus calculadora and the Night Shift Bonus calculadora (Brasil) — those two calcs are the ones readers usually open right after this page.
Seeing it on real numbers
A working example keeps the formula honest:
Apply the 30% Brazilian hazard-pay bonus on the base salary for workers exposed to specific risks per NR-16.
When to use this calculadora
Hazard Pay (Periculosidade) calculadora is aimed at people arriving with questions like these:
- "Adicional periculosidade 30%"
- "NR-16 periculosidade"
- "Periculosidade base cálculo"
- "What is periculosidade"
- "How to calculate periculosidade"
- "Periculosidade formula"
When to reach for something else
Every tool has an edge where it stops being the right answer. Hazard Pay (Periculosidade) calculadora is no exception:
- For legally binding tax or medical decisions — cross-check with HMRC, NHS or a qualified professional.
- For very large or very small extremes the rounding error outgrows the useful precision.
- When the underlying rate or threshold has changed since the page was last reviewed — always verify with the primary source.
- When the input you have is already a derived figure (net of something) — feeding it in as "gross" will double-subtract.
What goes wrong nine times out of ten
Every time you work it out for a new scenario, one of these creeps in — it's worth knowing them ahead of time.
- Ignoring the unit multiplier (k, M, %, basis points) on the input and feeding the raw number in anyway.
- Assuming the default settings match your context — check the calc's assumptions box before trusting the figure.
- Re-entering the result of a previous step as an input without keeping the full-precision number in front of you.
- Reading a negative answer as an error when the maths is telling you the inputs are in the wrong order.
- Cross-comparing to a tool that uses a different formula family (e.g. Mifflin vs Harris-Benedict) without saying so.
The sources behind the numbers
Where the maths needs an external authority, we cross-check against:
- Ministério do Trabalho
- NR-16
Works well alongside
If this question keeps coming up for you, the same cluster of tools usually comes next:
- Unhealthy Work Bonus calculadora — Apply the Brazilian insalubridade bonus (10/20/40% of the minimum wage) under NR-15, with degree and base-salary notes.
- Night Shift Bonus calculadora (Brasil) — Apply the 20% Brazilian night-shift bonus for hours worked between 22:00 and 05:00, including the 52min 30s reduced-hour rule.
- Brazilian Take-Home Pay Calculator — Convert Brazilian gross salary to net take-home pay with INSS + IRRF deductions and dependants, matching the 2026 tables.
How we keep this accurate
Our calculadoras run on pure, unit-tested functions — the same logic lives in the browser and in the CI test suite. When tax rates, thresholds or official figures move, the update lands within 24 hours of the announcement. You can read the editorial policy and corrections policy.
Found an out-of-date number on Hazard Pay (Periculosidade) calculadora or anywhere else in the Employment toolkit? Send it to the editorial desk and we'll patch it. Or browse the full calculadora directory for the next tool you need.
