Back to hub

Egypt Manufacturing Wages in 2026: Role-by-Role Bands for Factory Owners

Industry Insights Payroll Systems & Compliance July 16, 2026

When you plan the 2026 wage review for your factory staff, the bands you set this quarter shape the margin for the year, and they have to hold against the factory next door without breaking the model. The minimum wage across the private manufacturing sector in Egypt in 2026 sits on a EGP 7,000 benchmark, with role-by-role bands climbing to two or three times that figure for foremen and certified maintenance technicians.

We’ve put together a 2026 reference for SME factory owners and operations directors, with what sits on top of base pay, where the regional gaps actually fall, and how to anchor bands against real public data instead of estimations.

IN SHORT

Egypt’s 2026 factory wages start at the EGP 7,000 statutory floor for line work and rise through line lead, machine operator, quality inspector, maintenance technician, warehouse, supervisor, and foreman bands. Cairo, Delta, Upper Egypt, and the Suez Canal Economic Zone each shift the bands. Overtime, production bonus, transport, and meal allowances typically add 15–35% on top of the base salary. The reference tables and the 2026 planning notes below give you a starting point, not a final answer.

THE LEGAL FLOOR

What is the legal floor for manufacturing wages in Egypt in 2026?

The minimum wage in Egypt is set by the National Council for Wages (NWC) and re-decreed periodically. The current floor of EGP 7,000 per month gross was announced in early 2025 and remains the reference for private-sector employers heading into 2026.1 Any role on a factory payroll register sits at or above this figure for a standard full-time month.

The floor matters more for some sub-sectors than others. Ready-made garment and textile factories have historically anchored line-worker pay close to the statutory minimum, with production bonuses adding the rest. Metal, automotive parts, and chemicals usually sit well above the floor by default because the work itself requires more skill. International Labour Organization data on Egypt indicates that informal employment has long sat above 60% of non-agricultural employment, which is part of why the official floor only partly describes what workers actually take home.2

For an SME factory owner setting 2026 bands, the floor is the easy part. The harder question is what the band ABOVE the floor should look like for each role, in each region, so the wage holds against other factories in the market without breaking the margin model.

ROLE-BY-ROLE BANDS

What do role-by-role pay bands look like for an Egyptian factory in 2026?

Typical 2026 monthly gross base bands in Egyptian manufacturing run from around EGP 7,000 for line workers to EGP 22,000 or higher for foremen and certified maintenance technicians. Skilled-trade roles, quality inspection, and machine operation sit in the middle. The bands below are planning estimates from recruitment-market signals, not legally-binding figures.

Egyptian factory pay bands are not published as a single official table. The Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS) publishes average weekly wages by sector in the Labour Force Survey, but role-level bands by sub-sector and governorate are not in any public dataset.3 The table below is built from recruitment-market signals, Federation of Egyptian Industries member reporting, and the patterns we keep seeing across the manufacturing businesses on dopay. Treat the ranges as a planning starting point, not a benchmark to anchor a contract against.

Role Typical 2026 base (EGP/month gross) Sub-sector skew
Line worker (entry, unskilled) 7,000 to 8,500 Textile anchors at floor
Warehouse / stores assistant 7,500 to 9,500 Even across sub-sectors
Machine operator (semiskilled) 9,000 to 13,000 Metal and food = premium
Quality control / inspector 10,000 to 15,000 Food and pharma = higher
Line lead (working supervisor) 11,000 to 15,000 Even across sub-sectors
Maintenance technician (certified) 12,000 to 20,000 Metal and chemicals = top
Production supervisor 14,000 to 20,000 Even across sub-sectors
Foreman / shift lead 16,000 to 22,000 Metal and SEZONE = top
QC / production manager (junior) 22,000 to 35,000 Sector-led, SEZONE = premium

Please keep in mind a few things while referring to this table. The bands are gross base monthly, before adding overtime, bonus, and allowances. These figures assume a Greater Cairo / 10th of Ramadan reference; Delta and Upper Egypt figures usually sit at a lower mark, and the Suez Canal Economic Zone (SEZONE) usually sits above for skilled roles. Sub-sector skew matters: a quality inspector in a pharmaceutical line sits closer to the top of the QC band than the same role in a small garment factory. The numbers are planning estimates from market signals, not contractual benchmarks.

REGIONAL DIFFERENCES

How do wages shift across Cairo, the Delta, Upper Egypt, and the SEZ?

Greater Cairo and the 10th of Ramadan industrial zones typically pay the highest blue-collar bands. Delta governorates sit slightly below, and Upper Egypt sits even lower. The Suez Canal Economic Zone (SEZONE) often runs above Cairo for skilled roles because exporters compete for the same pool. Treat regional skew as a planning range, not a fixed multiplier.

Egypt’s industrial map is concentrated in a few corridors. Greater Cairo, 10th of Ramadan, 6th of October, and Borg El Arab outside Alexandria carry the bulk of formal manufacturing employment. The Delta has a second concentration around Gharbia and Sharqia, predominantly textile and food processing. Upper Egypt has historically had lower formal manufacturing density. The SEZONE has scaled fast over the past five years as exporters and foreign-investment projects ramped up.4

Geography significantly influences pay ranges. The pattern we keep seeing across the manufacturing businesses that have partnered with dopay is roughly this: take the Greater Cairo band as a reference point, subtract 5–15% for the Delta region, subtract another 5–15% for Upper Egypt, and add 5–20% for the SEZONE on skilled and supervisor roles. The unskilled bands compress because the EGP 7,000 floor sets the same minimum everywhere. The skilled bands stretch because skilled labor moves toward the higher-paying corridor.

For a SEZONE factory, the implication is direct: a maintenance technician you can hire in the Delta region at the low end of the band often costs you 15–20% more inside the zone, because the export-oriented neighbors are bidding for the same person. For an Upper Egypt factory, the implication is the opposite: the band sits lower, but recruiting a certified technician at all is harder, and the cost of bringing one in from Cairo (housing, transport, retention) can equalize most of the saving.

Here is a peek into how the regional band typically falls for a single role.

Typical 2026 monthly base for a certified maintenance technician, by region:

Region Typical base (EGP/month gross)
SEZONE 14,000 to 22,000
Greater Cairo / 10th of Ramadan 12,000 to 20,000
Delta (Gharbia, Sharqia) 10,500 to 17,500
Upper Egypt 9,000 to 15,000

Those figures are planning estimates only, built from Federation of Egyptian Industries sector signals and dopay’s manufacturing-customer pattern across regions. Bands are gross base monthly, before adding overtime, bonus, or allowances to base pay.

SUB-SECTOR SKEW

How do textile, food processing, and metal sub-sectors compare?

Textile and ready-made garments anchor near the EGP 7,000 floor for line work and rely on production bonuses for take-home pay. Food and beverage (F&B) processing pays a small premium for hygiene and HACCP-trained roles. Metal, automotive parts, and chemicals sit highest because certified maintenance and machine operation drive the bands.

The sub-sector often matters more than region when it comes to setting wage models. Two factories two streets apart in 10th of Ramadan, one in ready-made garments and one in automotive parts, will run different wage models. The garment factory anchors line workers at or near the statutory floor, then layers a piece-rate or production-bonus structure that raises the take-home figure for the fast operators. The automotive factory anchors line workers above the floor by default and pays a meaningful premium for certified roles. The sector reports of the Federation of Egyptian Industries document the deviation in the underlying skill mix.5

F&B processing sits between the two. Hygiene certification, HACCP training, and cold-chain handling all earn a band uplift. The supervisor band in food processing often runs at the top of the cross-sector range because retention is harder, with seasonal peaks around Ramadan and summer compressing the labor market. Pharmaceuticals sit even higher, but the SME pharma segment is small compared to multinational subsidiaries.

For an SME owner setting bands across multiple sub-sectors, the practical lesson is to anchor each band on the sub-sector first, then adjust depending on region. Anchoring on region first tends to under-pay the certified roles in the SEZONE and over-pay the line workers in Upper Egypt textiles.

FROM THE FIELD: WHAT WE SEE ON THE GROUND

Across the manufacturing businesses that have partnered with dopay, the bands SME owners actually set tend to cluster in the middle of the public ranges. The owners who set wages at the top of the range typically have a single skilled-trade bottleneck (one certified electrician, one specialty machine operator, etc.) and pay above-market to keep them. The owners who set wages at the bottom typically have high turnover in those same roles and rebuild the team every six to nine months. The middle of the band, paired with a predictable bonus on top, is where retention holds.

ON TOP OF BASE

What sits on top of the base wage in an Egyptian factory?

Wages at an Egyptian factory usually carry five things on top of base pay: overtime, production or attendance bonus, transport allowance, meal allowance or on-site canteen, and an annual bonus tied to output. Together, these add-ons typically lift gross monthly pay by 15–35% above base pay, which is why benchmarking on base pay alone is misleading.

Base pay is one line on the pay slip. The rest of what a factory worker takes home each month usually sits in a handful of recurring categories, each with its own rules and its own way of slipping through the audit trail if the payroll register does not catch them.

Add-on Typical pattern in Egyptian factories
Overtime Paid at the statutory premium over the hourly equivalent of base pay; commonly runs at 10–25% of base for line and operator roles in peak months.
Production or attendance bonus Output-linked for line workers, attendance-linked for support roles; typically 5–15% of base pay, sometimes higher in garment piece-rate models.
Transport allowance Flat monthly figure or factory bus; the flat figure is often EGP 500–1,500, depending on commute distance.
Meal allowance or canteen On-site canteen at zero or subsidized cost, or a flat allowance; equivalent value is commonly EGP 300–800 per month.
Annual or biannual bonus Tied to factory output or to feast-day cycles; commonly equivalent to one–two months of base pay, paid in one or two tranches.

The add-ons matter for two reasons. First, they shape what the worker actually takes home, which is the figure that drives retention. A line worker on EGP 7,500 base pay who takes home EGP 9,500 with bonus and overtime experiences a different job from one on the same base pay who clears EGP 7,800. Second, they shape the audit trail. Bonuses and allowances paid in cash or off register are the most common reason payroll reconciliation breaks at year end. With dopay for Business, base, overtime, bonus, transport, and meal allowance can all be recorded in one register and one monthly statement per employee.

For SME owners benchmarking against the factory next door, the practical lesson is to compare gross monthly take-home, not base wage. Two factories with the same base pay can run a 25% gap in take-home income once the add-on structure is calculated and implemented.

2026 PLANNING

How do you build 2026 wage bands that hold against the factory next door?

A 2026 band review starts with the statutory floor, layers in sub-sector and region, and finishes with the add-on structure each role expects. Most SME factories now run two reviews per year instead of one, with a mid-year check around any new National Council for Wages decree or major EGP exchange-rate shift.

Inflation in 2024 and 2025 broke the once-a-year band review for most SME factories we work with. Owners who previously set a wage band in January and held it for 12 months found themselves losing skilled workers to neighboring factories that re-priced in June. The pattern that holds up at SME scale is a January band-set plus a June check-in, with a fast adjustment window if the NWC issues a new decree or the EGP moves sharply.

For SME owners and operations directors, the practical sequence we see working is roughly: anchor each role on the statutory floor, layer the sub-sector band, layer the regional adjustment, layer the add-on structure, and, finally, compare against the actual offers your HR lead is making and losing in recruitment. The last step is the one that catches the gap between what the public ranges suggest and what your local recruitment market is actually paying.

For the band itself, transparency inside the factory tends to do more for retention than a small uplift at the top. Across the manufacturing businesses on dopay, the pattern we keep seeing is that workers who can see their own base, overtime, bonus, and allowance on one statement raise fewer disputes and ask for fewer ad-hoc advances than workers who get a single cash envelope each month. The band model and the payroll mechanics are connected.

The same logic applies to construction and contracting teams on rotating sites, where wage bands have to hold against the next project site as well as the next factory. Manufacturing just runs the cycle inside one location, which is the easier of the two in terms of operational challenges.

PAYROLL MECHANICS

How do you pay 50 or more factory workers without the cash logistics?

Paying 50 or more factory workers in cash means drawing a large sum on a known day, counting it on-site, and getting a signature on a sheet that never quite matches the pay slip. Moving the cycle onto a digital register removes the cash exposure, gives every worker an account from day one, and keeps the audit trail on one statement.

Cash payday carries an operational tax that is rarely on the budget line. Someone has to withdraw the cash. Someone has to count it. Someone has to sit with each employee and walk them through the content of envelope. Someone has to file the signature sheet. The day costs hours that day-to-day operations need.

It also blocks the audit trail your wage-band work depends on. If base pay, overtime, bonus, transport, and meal allowance arrive in one envelope, the worker cannot see which line moved, and your CFO cannot reconcile the run against the bank statement. According to the World Bank Global Findex Database, around 27% of Egyptian adults aged 15 and over held an account at a financial institution.6 More recent figures from the Central Bank of Egypt show financial inclusion climbing toward 71% when mobile wallets are counted alongside bank accounts.7 A meaningful share of any factory’s headcount still does not have a bank account on the day they are hired.

With dopay for Business, the monthly cycle moves to a digital register that disburses straight to a dopay account or a dopay card for workers who do not yet have one. Our on-the-ground logistics teams handle card production, on-site delivery, and in-person activation for workers who have never held a bank account before. Our 24/7 customer care teams in Cairo answer activation questions in Arabic and English, so onboarding does not pull a supervisor off the line.

For factory owners managing 50–500 workers, the practical pattern we keep seeing is a first payday within 30 days, with card delivery for the workers who don’t yet have a bank account running in parallel to the register setup. Each worker then sees a single statement with base, overtime, bonus, transport, and meal allowance broken out, which is the same evidence your accountant pulls for the next audit.

Move your factory payroll onto one clean cycle.

See how dopay for Business handles cash distribution, bonus reconciliation, and worker onboarding for SME factories in Egypt.

FAQ

What is the minimum wage for Egypt’s private sector in 2026?

The private-sector minimum wage in Egypt is EGP 7,000 per month (gross salary), which was set by the National Council for Wages in early 2025 and has been into effect through 2026, at least until the Council issues a new decree. The figure applies to a standard, full-time month and is the legal floor for any role on your payroll register, regardless of sub-sector.

How do manufacturing wages differ between Cairo, the Delta region, Upper Egypt, and the Special Economic Zones?

Cairo and 10th of Ramadan industrial zones typically pay the highest blue-collar bands, the Delta region sits slightly below, Upper Egypt sits even lower, and the SEZs around the Suez Canal Economic Zone (SEZONE) often run above Cairo for skilled roles because exporters compete for the same talent pool. The exact gap varies by sub-sector. Treat the regional differences as a planning range, not a fixed multiplier.

What is typically not included in an Egyptian factory worker’s base wage?

Base wage usually excludes overtime, production or attendance bonuses, transport allowance, meal allowance or on-site canteen, and any shift differentials for night or weekend work. Many factories also run an annual bonus tied to output. Together, these add-ons can increase gross monthly pay by 15–35% above the contracted base pay, which is why benchmarking on base pay alone is misleading.

How much do textile, food processing, and metal factories pay differently?

Textile and ready-made garment factories typically anchor at or near the minimum wage for line workers, with production bonuses making up the difference. F&B processing tends to pay a small premium for hygiene and HACCP-trained roles. Metal, automotive parts, and engineering sit highest because the work requires certified maintenance and machine-operator skills. Sub-sector matters more than the headline city in most cases.

Are expat or foreign workers paid on the same bands as Egyptian staff in factories?

No. Foreign hires in Egyptian factories are usually brought in for senior technical or plant-management roles and sit on a separate band, often two to four times the local equivalent once housing, schooling, and relocation are included. For the bulk of an SME factory’s headcount, the local bands apply, and the expat conversation only opens at the plant-manager level.

How often should an SME factory in Egypt review its wage bands?

At least once a year, before the budget cycle, with a mid-year check around any National Council for Wages decree or any major shift in the EGP exchange rate. Inflation in 2024 and 2025 forced most factory owners we work with to do two reviews per year instead of one. A digital payroll register makes the second review a planning exercise rather than a spreadsheet rebuild.

Where can a factory owner find reliable Egyptian wage data?

CAPMAS publishes the Labour Force Survey and average weekly wage data by sector. The Federation of Egyptian Industries (FEI) issues sector reports for member factories. The ILO Egypt country office tracks formal employment trends. None of these publish a public role-by-role band per governorate. The role-level bands always come from a mix of public data, recruitment-market signals, and what neighboring factories actually pay.

Set next year’s wage bands on one clean payroll cycle

We’ll walk through your shift pattern, set up the register with base pay and add-ons broken out, and run your first payday with you, side by side.

Sources

  1. Egyptian National Council for Wages. Private-sector minimum wage decree, 2025. EGP 7,000 per month gross floor.
  2. International Labour Organization. Informal employment data for Egypt; non-agricultural informal share above 60%.
  3. CAPMAS. Egypt Labour Force Survey, 2023; average weekly wage by economic activity.
  4. General Authority for the Suez Canal Economic Zone, periodic investor and employment reports.
  5. Federation of Egyptian Industries. Sector reports for member factories on workforce skill mix.
  6. World Bank. Global Findex Database 2021. Account ownership data, Egypt.
  7. Central Bank of Egypt. Financial Inclusion Indicators, 2024.