Calculate your exact net paycheck after federal tax, state tax, FICA, and pre-tax deductions.
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Your pre-tax yearly salary from your employer (e.g., $85,000)
How often you get paid — Biweekly (every 2 weeks) is most common
How you file your federal return. Married Filing Jointly usually has the lowest tax.
Your state of residence. TX, FL, NV, WA, WY, TN, SD have no income tax.
Pre-tax retirement contribution. Every $1,000 saves ~$220–$370 in taxes.
Your share of employer health insurance (pre-tax). Common gotcha: use annual, not monthly.
Angela, 41, 7th-grade science teacher in Fresno USD, Step 8 salary $72,400. She files Single, contributes 5% to CalSTRS (pension). CalSTRS replaces Social Security for most California teachers. She wants to know her biweekly take-home.
Takeaway: Angela's effective total tax + pension deduction rate is ~31%. California's SDI rate increased to 1.1% in 2024 with no wage cap (AB 102). CalSTRS members don't pay into Social Security — a critical retirement planning difference vs private-sector workers.
The 2020 W-4 replaced allowances with dollar-based adjustments (Steps 2–4). If you have a pre-2020 W-4 on file or enter legacy allowance counts, federal withholding will be miscalculated. Filing a new W-4 is required after any life event per IRS Publication 505.
Bonuses paid as separate payments are withheld at a flat 22% federal supplemental rate (37% above $1M in 2025) per Rev. Proc. 2024-40 — not the marginal rate from your regular paycheck. Year-end withholding true-up may produce a refund or balance due.
Bonus Tax CalculatorRemote workers whose work state differs from residence state may owe taxes in both. New York applies "convenience of employer" rules — NY taxes 100% of your income even if you live in NJ and work from home, unless your employer maintains a bona fide NJ office for you.
Salary After-Tax CalculatorHSA contributions, Section 125 FSA elections, and pre-tax commuter benefits reduce both federal taxable wages and FICA base. A $3,200 FSA election saves $244 in FICA plus marginal income tax. These reductions are not reflected unless entered as pre-tax deductions.
HSA CalculatorAn additional 0.9% Medicare surtax (§3101(b)(2)) applies to wages above $200,000 for single filers and $250,000 MFJ. Employers withhold it above $200k per employee regardless of filing status — married couples may under-withhold through payroll and owe at filing.
Based on your inputs
per paycheck · $4,823/mo · $57,873/yr
before taxes & deductions
Marginal bracket: 22% · You keep 77.2% of gross
| Gross Pay (per paycheck) | $2,885 |
|---|---|
| Federal Income Tax | -$277 |
| State Income Tax | -$0 |
| FICA (SS + Medicare) | -$221 |
| Pre-Tax Deductions | -$162 |
| Net Take-Home Pay | $2,226 |
Want deeper insight? Save this result to see it analyzed across your full Financial Picture — retirement readiness, housing affordability, and tax efficiency all in one view. Use the Save or Analyze button above.
Paycheck shows today's take-home. The 401k calculator shows whether your current contribution will fund retirement — and what raising it 1–2% does to your paycheck.
Your marginal bracket is 22%. The tax bracket tool shows exactly how the next dollar of income — raise, bonus, side gig — gets taxed.
Lenders qualify you on gross income, but affordability runs on the $4,823/mo you actually take home. See the real max.
Analyze 3+ calcs to unlock your Financial Picture dashboard (cross-analysis of all your numbers).
You earn $5,000 biweekly. But your take-home is only $3,200. Where does the other $1,800 go?
Understanding your paycheck breakdown isn't just about knowing the math — it's about understanding how much you're really earning and planning your finances accurately.
Your gross pay is your total earnings before any deductions. It's what you negotiated for, what's reported to the IRS, and what appears on job offers.
Example:"$100,000 annual salary" = $100,000 gross, paid as ~$3,846 biweekly (26 paychecks/year).
Your net pay is what actually deposits into your bank account — gross pay minus all deductions.
For the same $100,000 salary in a medium tax state, net might be only $70,000-$75,000 annually.
Paycheck deductions fall into two categories: mandatory (taxes) and voluntary (benefits).
The IRS requires employers to withhold federal income tax based on:
How much is withheld? The IRS provides withholding tables, and employers use your W4 to calculate it. The goal is to withhold enough throughout the year that you don't owe a large tax bill on April 15.
2025 Tax Brackets (Single Filer):
| Income Range | Tax Rate |
|---|---|
| $0–$11,925 | 10% |
| $11,926–$48,475 | 12% |
| $48,476–$103,350 | 22% |
| $103,351–$197,300 | 24% |
| $197,301–$250,525 | 32% |
| $250,526–$626,350 | 35% |
| $626,351+ | 37% |
Note: Only income within each bracket is taxed at that rate. A single filer making $60,000 pays 10% on the first $11,925, 12% on the next $36,550, and 22% on the remaining $11,525. Total tax: ~$8,879 (effective rate: 14.8%).
FICA is a flat tax on wages, split between you and your employer:
How it works: Your employer automatically withholds these amounts from your paycheck. Your employer also pays an equal amount on your behalf (you don't see this, but it's part of your total compensation).
Example: $5,000 biweekly paycheck:
Plus your employer pays another $382.50 into the Social Security and Medicare systems on your behalf. You're building up credits toward your future benefits.
Most states (except TX, FL, NV, WA, WY, TN, SD) withhold state income tax. Rates vary widely:
State withholding works similarly to federal withholding — based on your W4 (or state equivalent) and your income.
A few cities (e.g., Philadelphia, Columbus) withhold local income tax. Usually 1-2% of gross pay.
These reduce your taxable income:
Contributions to a traditional 401(k) are deducted before federal and state income taxes are calculated.
Tax benefit: If you contribute $500/paycheck (which is pre-tax), your federal tax is calculated on income minus that $500.
Example:
2025 limit: $23,500/year ($31,000 if 50+)
Premiums for employer health insurance plans are typically deducted pre-tax from your paycheck.
Tax benefit: A $1,200 annual premium reduces your taxable income by $1,200, saving taxes at your marginal rate (let's say 22%): $264 in federal tax savings.
If you have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP), you can contribute to an HSA — the most tax-advantaged savings account available.
Triple tax advantage:
2025 limits: $4,150 individual / $8,300 family
Similar to HSA but less flexible. Contributions are pre-tax; you must spend the money or lose it (use-it-or-lose-it rule).
2025 limit: $3,300
Pre-tax deductions for childcare or adult care expenses.
2025 limit: $5,000
These come out after taxes and don't reduce your taxable income:
Scenario: Single filer, biweekly pay, $80,000 annual salary, California resident
Gross paycheck: $80,000 ÷ 26 paychecks = $3,077
| Deduction | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Pay | $3,077 | |
| Federal Income Tax | -$488 | 22% bracket |
| Social Security (6.2%) | -$191 | |
| Medicare (1.45%) | -$45 | |
| State Income Tax (CA) | -$213 | ~6.95% effective |
| 401(k) contribution (pre-tax) | -$300 | Reduces taxable income |
| Health Insurance (pre-tax) | -$92 | Employee share |
| Net Pay | $1,748 | 43.5% of gross |
These two rates are often confused:
Marginal Tax Rate: The tax rate on your last dollar of income.
Effective Tax Rate: Your total tax ÷ total income.
Your annual salary is fixed, but the number of paychecks per year affects individual paycheck size.
| Pay Frequency | Paychecks/Year | Per-Check Amount ($80K Annual) |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | 52 | $1,538 |
| Biweekly (2x/month) | 26 | $3,077 |
| Semi-Monthly | 24 | $3,333 |
| Monthly | 12 | $6,667 |
Biweekly is most common in the U.S. Note: Two months per year have 3 biweekly periods (e.g., if paid on the 1st and 15th, some months have payday on the 1st and again on the 29th/30th).
If your paycheck withholding feels wrong, you can adjust your W4.
Reasons to adjust:
Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator to get the right amount.
Our Paycheck Calculator lets you model your exact paycheck based on:
Use it to verify your paycheck or plan how changes (raises, increased 401k, job change) affect your take-home pay.
A traditional 401(k) contribution is deducted from your gross income before federal and state income taxes are calculated. This reduces your taxable income dollar-for-dollar.
The Tax Savings Formula:
Tax Savings = 401k Contribution × Your Marginal Tax Rate
Example:
This means you're effectively investing $6,000 from pre-tax income, and the government subsidizes 31.3% of it through tax savings.
| Category | Limit |
|---|---|
| Employee contribution (under 50) | $23,500 |
| Employee contribution (50+, catch-up) | $31,000 |
| Total employee + employer (under 50) | $69,500 |
| Total employee + employer (50+) | $77,000 |
Tier 1: Get the Full Employer Match (MINIMUM)
If your employer matches, always contribute enough to capture it. This is free money.
Example:"We match 100% of contributions up to 4%" means:
Tier 2: Maximize Tax Savings (RECOMMENDED)
After capturing the match, consider maxing your 401k to get maximum tax deduction.
2025 limit: $23,500/year ($1,958/month biweekly). If possible, this is ideal for tax optimization.
Tier 3: Backdoor Roth (High Earners)
If your income exceeds direct Roth IRA contribution limits ($150,000 single), execute a backdoor Roth conversion to get another $7,000-$8,000 of tax-advantaged savings.
Contributions are pre-tax (deductible now).
Contributions are post-tax (no deduction now).
Rule of thumb: If you're in a high tax bracket now (top 30% of earners), use Traditional 401k for immediate tax savings. If you're in a lower bracket and early in your career, use Roth 401k for future tax-free growth.
If your employer offers a 401k match, this is guaranteed, immediate, risk-free returns — often 50-100%.
Common match structures:
| Employer Match | Your Contribution Required | Effective Return |
|---|---|---|
| 100% match up to 3% | 3% | 100% instant (employer doubles your money) |
| 50% match up to 6% | 6% | 50% instant on 6% = 3% employer contribution |
| 100% match up to 4%, 50% on next 2% | 6% | 100% on first 4%, 50% on next 2% = 5% employer contribution |
Example of leaving money on the table:
Prioritize capturing the full match, even if it means reducing other savings temporarily.
If you have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP), you're eligible for an HSA. It's the most tax-advantaged savings vehicle in the U.S. tax code.
Compare this to a traditional 401k (deductible but growth and withdrawals are taxed) or Roth (not deductible but growth and withdrawals are tax-free).
| Coverage Type | HSA Contribution Limit |
|---|---|
| Self-only (individual) | $4,150 |
| Family | $8,300 |
| Age 55+ catch-up | Additional $1,000 |
Many high earners max out their HSA before maxing their 401k because of the triple tax advantage.
Optimal contribution sequence:
Your portion of employer health insurance premiums is deducted pre-tax from your paycheck. This isn't negotiable like 401k, but it's valuable.
Example: You pay $400/month for health insurance (employee share).
Scenario: $100,000 annual salary, California resident, single filer
Scenario A: No 401k or HSA contributions
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross Annual | $100,000 |
| Federal income tax | -$13,476 |
| State income tax | -$7,425 |
| FICA (Social Security + Medicare) | -$7,650 |
| Net Annual | $71,449 |
| Take-Home % | 71.4% |
Scenario B: $10,000 401k + $4,150 HSA contributions
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross Annual | $100,000 |
| 401k contribution | -$10,000 (pre-tax) |
| HSA contribution | -$4,150 (pre-tax) |
| Taxable Income | $85,850 |
| Federal income tax | -$11,117 |
| State income tax | -$6,340 |
| FICA (on $100K, not reduced) | -$7,650 |
| Net Annual | $60,743 |
| But you also have: | |
| 401k balance | $10,000 |
| HSA balance | $4,150 |
| Total Wealth Gain | $74,893 |
The Comparison:
Scenario B looks like less take-home, but you're actually building $14,150 in tax-advantaged wealth while saving $9,491 in taxes. You're ahead.
Our Paycheck Calculator lets you input your 401k and health insurance contributions to see the exact after-tax impact. Use it to:
The U.S. uses a progressive tax system. This means your income is taxed at different rates depending on how much you earn.
Key concept: Only the income that falls within each bracket is taxed at that bracket's rate. You don't pay the highest rate on all your income.
| Bracket | Income Range | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $0–$11,925 | 10% |
| 2 | $11,926–$48,475 | 12% |
| 3 | $48,476–$103,350 | 22% |
| 4 | $103,351–$197,300 | 24% |
| 5 | $197,301–$250,525 | 32% |
| 6 | $250,526–$626,350 | 35% |
| 7 | $626,351+ | 37% |
Let's say you make $60,000 (single filer, no dependents).
You don't pay 22% on all $60,000. Here's how it's actually taxed:
| Step | Income in This Bracket | Tax Rate | Tax Owed |
|---|---|---|---|
| First bracket | $11,925 | 10% | $1,193 |
| Second bracket | $36,550 ($48,475 − $11,925) | 12% | $4,386 |
| Third bracket | $11,525 ($60,000 − $48,475) | 22% | $2,536 |
| Total Tax | $60,000 | - | $8,115 |
Your tax rate breakdown:
This is why effective rate is always lower than marginal rate. Your effective rate is a weighted average across all the brackets below your marginal rate.
Understanding this difference is crucial for tax planning.
The tax rate on your next dollar of income. This is what matters for decisions like:
For $60,000 income: Your marginal rate is 22%. The next $1,000 you earn is taxed at 22%, not your overall effective rate of 13.5%.
Your total tax liability divided by your total income. This tells you roughly what percentage of your income goes to federal taxes.
For $60,000 income: Your effective rate is 13.5%. You paid $8,115 on $60,000.
Common fear:"If I get a raise, I'll move into a higher tax bracket and actually take home less money."
Reality: This is mathematically impossible with progressive brackets. Let's prove it.
Scenario: You make $48,000 (marginal rate 12%) and get a $10,000 raise to $58,000.
| Income Level | Federal Tax | After-Tax Income | Additional Take-Home |
|---|---|---|---|
| $48,000 | $5,292 | $42,708 | - |
| $58,000 | $7,828 | $50,172 | $7,464 ✓ |
Your after-tax income went up by $7,464, even though you moved from the 12% bracket into the 22% bracket. You always come out ahead with a raise.
Filing status significantly affects your tax brackets. Here's the comparison:
| Bracket | Income Range | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $0–$23,850 | 10% |
| 2 | $23,851–$96,950 | 12% |
| 3 | $96,951–$206,700 | 22% |
| 4 | $206,701–$394,600 | 24% |
| 5+ | Higher brackets... | 32%, 35%, 37% |
Compare: A married couple making $100,000 combined ($50,000 each) pays less tax than a single person making $100,000.
| Bracket | Income Range | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | $0–$17,000 | 10% |
| 2 | $17,001–$64,850 | 12% |
| 3 | $64,851–$103,350 | 22% |
| 4+ | Higher brackets... | 24%, 32%, 35%, 37% |
Head of Household is more favorable than Single but less favorable than Married Filing Jointly. You qualify if you're unmarried and pay more than half the household expenses for yourself and a dependent.
The standard deduction is the amount of income you don't pay tax on. For 2025:
| Filing Status | Standard Deduction |
|---|---|
| Single | $15,000 |
| Married Filing Jointly | $30,000 |
| Head of Household | $22,500 |
| Age 65+ (add) | +$2,100 (single), +$1,700 each (married) |
What this means: If you make $50,000 as a single filer, your taxable income is only $50,000 − $15,000 = $35,000. You only pay taxes on $35,000.
Federal tax is only part of your tax burden. State income tax can add 0–13% depending on where you live.
TX, FL, NV, WA, WY, TN, SD — These states have no personal income tax. Residents pay only federal tax (and local taxes in some cities).
Impact on take-home pay:
Formula: Total Tax Liability ÷ Total Income = Effective Tax Rate
Example for $100,000 income (single, California):
Once you know your marginal rate, you can make smart tax decisions.
If you're in a 22% federal + 9% state marginal bracket, a $5,000 401k contribution saves you:
You invest $5,000 and save $1,550 in taxes. Very worthwhile.
Your employer offers a $20,000 bonus. Taxed at marginal rate (22% federal + 9% state) = 31% tax = $6,200 tax bill.
After-tax bonus: $13,800. Is that worth it? Only you can decide, but now you have the math.
Our Paycheck Calculator and Tax Bracket Calculator show your exact federal and state tax burden. Use them to:
Federal income tax uses progressive brackets. For 2025, single filers pay 10% on income up to $11,925, 12% up to $48,475, 22% up to $103,350, 24% up to $197,300, and higher rates above that. Only the income within each bracket is taxed at that rate.
FICA consists of Social Security tax (6.2% on wages up to $176,100 in 2025) and Medicare tax (1.45% on all wages). Your employer matches these amounts. High earners also pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax on wages over $200,000.
Traditional 401k contributions are pre-tax, reducing your taxable income dollar-for-dollar. If you contribute $5,000/year and are in the 22% bracket, you save $1,100 in federal taxes. The 2025 contribution limit is $23,500 ($31,000 if 50+).
Gross pay is your total earnings before deductions. Net pay (take-home pay) is what remains after federal tax, state tax, FICA, and pre-tax deductions like 401k and health insurance are withheld.
Pay frequency doesn't change your annual salary but does affect withholding. Biweekly (26 paychecks/year) is most common. Semi-monthly (24/year) and weekly (52/year) are also common. Monthly produces the largest individual paychecks.
State income tax rates vary widely. Some states like Texas and Florida have no income tax. Others like California have rates up to 13.3%. Most states use flat or progressive rates between 3-7%. This calculator uses simplified flat-rate approximations for the top 10 states.
The average American pays 25-35% of gross income in total taxes. Federal income tax takes 10-22% for most earners, FICA takes 7.65%, and state income tax adds 0-13% depending on location. A $75,000 salary typically yields $52,000-$58,000 in take-home pay.
Claim more allowances or request additional deductions on your W-4 to reduce withholding and increase take-home pay. However, under-withholding means you may owe taxes at filing. Aim for a refund under $500 to maximize your paycheck without risking a tax bill.
Non-exempt employees must receive overtime pay at 1.5x their regular rate for hours over 40 per week. Exempt employees receive a fixed salary regardless of hours worked. Exemption requires meeting salary ($35,568/year minimum) and job duties tests set by the Department of Labor.
Health insurance premiums, 401k contributions, HSA deposits, and FSA elections are deducted before taxes, reducing your taxable income. Contributing $500/month pre-tax to a 401k saves $110-$160/month in taxes depending on your bracket, making the actual paycheck reduction only $340-$390.
Employers use IRS withholding tables (Publication 15-T) based on your W-4, which can differ from a simple bracket calculation. Common reasons: your employer withholds extra per your W-4, you have post-tax deductions (Roth 401k, life insurance, union dues), local/city tax, wage garnishments, or imputed income on benefits. Expect this calculator to be within ±$50-100/paycheck for most W-2 employees.
No — this calculator models your regular pay only. Bonuses and commissions are usually withheld at a flat 22% federal supplemental rate (or aggregated with regular pay) and can push you into a higher bracket at year-end. Run the Pay Raise Impact or Tax Bracket calculator to model bonus impact separately.
For a single W-2 job with no unusual items, the annual take-home shown here lands within ±$200-500 of your real year-end figure. Biggest accuracy gaps: multi-state work, non-standard W-4 elections, employer FSA/HSA payroll deductions not entered here, and state-level surtaxes (CA SDI, NJ FLI, etc.).
Run the calculator separately for each job and add the net take-home figures. Important caveat: combined income may push you into a higher bracket, so real withholding across two jobs often under-withholds unless you check Step 2(c) on your W-4 or use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator. Married-filing-jointly filers should model combined household income in the annual salary field.
Net Pay = Gross Pay − Federal Tax − State Tax − FICA − Pre-Tax Deductions
Federal tax uses 2025 progressive brackets after standard deduction ($15,000 single / $30,000 married). FICA = Social Security (6.2% up to $176,100) + Medicare (1.45% + 0.9% surtax above $200k). State tax uses simplified flat-rate approximations.
Every formula on this page traces to a federal agency, central bank, or peer-reviewed institution. We cite the rule-makers, not secondhand blogs.
Found an error in a formula or source? Report it →
State-specific rates, taxes, and cost-of-living adjustments
Calculations are for educational purposes only. Consult a qualified financial advisor for personalized advice.