These deductions are in addition to the standard deduction (not a replacement). They reduce your taxable income directly. Valid 2026–2028.
Your take-home pay results will appear here in real time as you enter your income details.
How to Calculate Your After-Tax Net Pay (Gross vs. Net)
From gross income to your actual paycheck in four simple steps. Our calculator applies 2026 federal brackets, all 50 state rates, FICA, and the new One Big Beautiful Bill deductions automatically.
Start by choosing your income type and entering your gross earnings, pay frequency, state, and filing status.
- W-2 salary or hourly wage
- Freelancer / 1099 revenue & expenses
- S-Corp profit & reasonable salary
- Filing status & dependents
Reduce your taxable income by entering employer-sponsored benefits and retirement contributions.
- 401(k) / 403(b) contributions
- Health, dental & vision premiums
- HSA & FSA contributions
- Commuter & life insurance
The engine applies 2026 progressive brackets, FICA caps, state rates, and new OBBB deductions in real time.
- Federal income tax (7 brackets)
- Social Security 6.2% up to $184,500
- Medicare 1.45% + 0.9% surtax
- State income tax (all 50 states + DC)
Get a complete breakdown with net pay, tax rates, visual charts, and export your results instantly.
- Annual & per-paycheck net pay
- Effective & marginal tax rates
- Donut chart & line-by-line table
- PDF report & WhatsApp share
Federal vs. State Taxes: FICA, Medicare, and IRS Withholdings
Take-home pay is the amount you actually receive after federal taxes, state taxes, FICA contributions, and pre-tax deductions are subtracted from your gross income. Here’s everything that shapes your paycheck.
The U.S. uses a progressive (marginal) tax system, meaning your income is taxed in layers. Only the dollars that fall within each bracket are taxed at that bracket’s rate — not your entire income. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act preserved the seven-bracket structure with inflation-adjusted thresholds for 2026.
| Rate | Single Filers | Married Filing Jointly | Head of Household |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $11,925 | $0 – $23,850 | $0 – $17,000 |
| 12% | $11,926 – $48,475 | $23,851 – $96,950 | $17,001 – $64,850 |
| 22% | $48,476 – $103,350 | $96,951 – $206,700 | $64,851 – $103,350 |
| 24% | $103,351 – $197,300 | $206,701 – $394,600 | $103,351 – $197,300 |
| 32% | $197,301 – $250,525 | $394,601 – $501,050 | $197,301 – $250,500 |
| 35% | $250,526 – $626,350 | $501,051 – $751,600 | $250,501 – $626,350 |
| 37% | Over $626,350 | Over $751,600 | Over $626,350 |
The standard deduction reduces your adjusted gross income (AGI) before federal tax brackets are applied. Most taxpayers use the standard deduction unless itemized deductions (mortgage interest, SALT, charitable giving) exceed it.
These are the two most commonly confused tax concepts. Understanding the difference helps you accurately evaluate your true tax burden and make smarter financial decisions.
FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) funds Social Security and Medicare. These are flat-rate taxes applied on top of income tax. W-2 employees split FICA 50/50 with their employer, while self-employed workers pay both halves (15.3% total) through self-employment tax.
Signed into law as part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, these four new deductions let qualifying workers and seniors reduce their taxable income beyond the standard deduction. They are above-the-line, meaning they reduce your AGI even if you don’t itemize.
Cash and credit card tips reported as income by workers in tipped occupations (food service, hospitality, beauty, etc.) can be deducted. Applies to tips received for services directly performed by the taxpayer.
Up to $25,000/year · Phases out above $150K (S) / $300K (MFJ)Wages earned for hours worked beyond 40 hours per week that are paid at a premium rate (typically 1.5× or higher) under the FLSA. Salaried exempt employees generally do not qualify.
Up to $12,500 (S) / $25,000 (MFJ) per yearInterest paid on a loan used to purchase a new, U.S.-manufactured motor vehicle (final assembly in the United States). Applies to loans originated after the bill’s enactment date.
Up to $10,000/year in deductible interestAn additional deduction for taxpayers who are age 65 or older by the end of the tax year. This is a flat amount added on top of the standard deduction and existing elderly/blind additions.
$4,000 additional deduction for qualifying seniorsIf you’re a freelancer, independent contractor, or sole proprietor, you pay both the employee and employer share of FICA — a combined 15.3% on 92.35% of your net self-employment income.
You can then deduct 50% of your SE tax as an above-the-line deduction, reducing your AGI for income tax purposes. Self-employed workers may also qualify for the 20% QBI (Qualified Business Income) deduction under Section 199A.
State income tax is an additional layer on top of federal taxes. Nine states have no income tax, while others use flat or progressive rates. Your state of residence (or employment) significantly impacts your take-home pay.
Pre-tax deductions are subtracted from your gross pay before federal income tax, state tax, and in most cases FICA are calculated. Maximizing these is one of the most effective ways to increase take-home pay while building long-term wealth and protection.
| Benefit | 2026 Limit | Reduces Federal Tax | Reduces FICA |
|---|---|---|---|
| 401(k) / 403(b) | $23,500 | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| 401(k) Catch-Up (50+) | $7,500 | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
| Health Insurance Premium | Varies | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| HSA (Self-Only) | $4,300 | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| HSA (Family) | $8,550 | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| FSA (Healthcare) | $3,300 | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Dependent Care FSA | $5,000 | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Commuter Benefits | $325/mo | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes |
| Traditional IRA | $7,000 | ✓ Yes | ✗ No |
The Child Tax Credit directly reduces your federal tax liability — not just your taxable income. For 2026, the credit is $2,000 per qualifying child under age 17. Up to $1,700 is refundable (Additional Child Tax Credit) even if you owe no tax.
Every paycheck goes through a defined sequence of subtractions. Understanding each step helps you identify exactly where your money goes — and where you can optimize.
2026 IRS Income Tax Brackets & Standard Deductions
Interactive reference table for all seven federal tax brackets. Select your filing status, enter your taxable income, and instantly see which brackets apply, how much tax you owe at each level, and your effective rate.
| Rate | Taxable Income Range | Tax at This Bracket | Cumulative Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $11,925 | $1,192.50 | $1,192.50 |
| 12% | $11,926 – $48,475 | $4,386.00 | $5,578.50 |
| 22% | $48,476 – $103,350 | $12,072.50 | $17,651.00 |
| 24% | $103,351 – $197,300 | $22,548.00 | $40,199.00 |
| 32% | $197,301 – $250,525 | $17,032.00 | $57,231.00 |
| 35% | $250,526 – $626,350 | $131,538.75 | $188,769.75 |
| 37% | Over $626,350 | Varies | $188,769.75 + |
| Rate | Taxable Income Range | Tax at This Bracket | Cumulative Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $23,850 | $2,385.00 | $2,385.00 |
| 12% | $23,851 – $96,950 | $8,772.00 | $11,157.00 |
| 22% | $96,951 – $206,700 | $24,145.00 | $35,302.00 |
| 24% | $206,701 – $394,600 | $45,096.00 | $80,398.00 |
| 32% | $394,601 – $501,050 | $34,064.00 | $114,462.00 |
| 35% | $501,051 – $751,600 | $87,692.50 | $202,154.50 |
| 37% | Over $751,600 | Varies | $202,154.50 + |
| Rate | Taxable Income Range | Tax at This Bracket | Cumulative Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $11,925 | $1,192.50 | $1,192.50 |
| 12% | $11,926 – $48,475 | $4,386.00 | $5,578.50 |
| 22% | $48,476 – $103,350 | $12,072.50 | $17,651.00 |
| 24% | $103,351 – $197,300 | $22,548.00 | $40,199.00 |
| 32% | $197,301 – $250,525 | $17,032.00 | $57,231.00 |
| 35% | $250,526 – $375,800 | $43,846.25 | $101,077.25 |
| 37% | Over $375,800 | Varies | $101,077.25 + |
| Rate | Taxable Income Range | Tax at This Bracket | Cumulative Tax |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $17,000 | $1,700.00 | $1,700.00 |
| 12% | $17,001 – $64,850 | $5,742.00 | $7,442.00 |
| 22% | $64,851 – $103,350 | $8,470.00 | $15,912.00 |
| 24% | $103,351 – $197,300 | $22,548.00 | $38,460.00 |
| 32% | $197,301 – $250,500 | $17,024.00 | $55,484.00 |
| 35% | $250,501 – $626,350 | $131,547.50 | $187,031.50 |
| 37% | Over $626,350 | Varies | $187,031.50 + |
The “One Big Beautiful Bill” (OBBB): New Exemptions for Tips & Overtime
Signed into law on July 4, 2025, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act introduces four powerful above-the-line deductions that reduce taxable income for tips, overtime, auto loan interest, and seniors. These deductions are temporary (2025–2028) and available regardless of whether you itemize.
- Tips must be reported on Form W-2 (Box 7) or voluntarily reported by the individual on Schedule 1-A
- Available to all filing statuses — you do not need to itemize deductions to claim this
- Covers cash tips, credit card tips, and tip-sharing arrangements reported to the employer
- Reduces income tax only — FICA taxes (Social Security + Medicare) are still owed on tip income
- Self-employed (1099) tip income does not qualify — must be W-2 reported tips with a valid SSN
- Does not apply to service charges automatically added by the employer — only voluntary tips qualify
- Covers the premium portion only — for “time-and-a-half” pay, only the extra 50% (the “half”) is deductible, not the base hour rate
- Overtime must be required under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) and reported on W-2, 1099, or specified statement
- Available regardless of itemization — claimed on new IRS Schedule 1-A
- Married taxpayers must file jointly to claim this deduction — MFS status is excluded
- Only reduces federal income tax — FICA (Social Security + Medicare) still applies to full overtime pay
- Salaried exempt employees who don’t receive FLSA-qualified overtime do not qualify
- Covers interest on loans for cars, trucks, SUVs, and vans with final assembly in the United States
- Applies to both new and used vehicles — purchase date or loan origination can be before 2025
- Refinanced vehicle loans also qualify — interest on the refinanced amount is generally eligible
- Available regardless of itemization — claimed on new IRS Schedule 1-A alongside other OBBB deductions
- Only the interest portion of your payment is deductible — principal payments do not count
- Vehicles assembled outside the U.S. do not qualify, even if sold by a U.S. brand (check the VIN’s 11th digit or NHTSA database)
- Available to any taxpayer age 65 or older by the end of the tax year — this is in addition to the existing senior standard deduction amount
- Married couples where both spouses are 65+ can deduct $12,000 combined ($6,000 each)
- Requires a Social Security Number (SSN) valid for work — ITIN holders do not qualify
- Phase-out begins at MAGI of $75,000 (Single) / $150,000 (MFJ) — completely phases out at higher income levels
- Married Filing Separately (MFS) filers are excluded from claiming this deduction entirely
- Dependents claimed on another taxpayer’s return cannot claim this additional senior deduction
5 U.S. Wage Case Studies: From W-2 Salary to S-Corp Distributions
See exactly how take-home pay is calculated for five different Americans — from a salaried teacher in Texas to an S-Corp consultant in California. Every number is computed using 2026 tax law.
Pro Tips: Optimizing Your W-4 Form & Pre-Tax Deductions (401k/HSA)
Financial experts and CPAs share their top strategies to legally reduce your tax burden, boost your paycheck, and keep more of the money you earn — every single pay period.
Pre-tax contributions to your 401(k), 403(b), traditional IRA, HSA, and FSA reduce your taxable income before your employer calculates withholding. This means you see the tax savings in every single paycheck — not just at tax filing time. A $500/month 401(k) contribution at the 22% bracket saves $110/month in federal tax alone, so the actual paycheck reduction is only $390.
- 401(k)/403(b): Contribute at least enough to capture your employer’s full match — that’s an instant 50–100% return. The 2026 limit is $23,500 ($31,000 if age 50+).
- HSA (Health Savings Account): The triple-tax advantage — deductible going in, grows tax-free, and withdrawals for medical expenses are tax-free. 2026 limit: $4,300 individual / $8,550 family.
- Dependent Care FSA: Up to $5,000/year for childcare or eldercare expenses — saves both income tax and FICA (7.65%).
- Order of priority: Employer match → HSA max → 401(k) max → Dependent Care FSA → then Roth options.
If you consistently get a large tax refund, you’re over-withholding — the IRS holds your money interest-free all year and returns it months later. The 2020 redesigned W-4 form lets you fine-tune withholding by claiming deductions (Step 4b) and credits (Step 3) you expect. Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator in January or after any life change to dial in the right amount.
- Use IRS Form W-4 Step 4(b) to enter your expected itemized/standard deductions beyond the default — this reduces withholding immediately
- Claim the full Child Tax Credit ($2,000/child) on W-4 Step 3 so your employer withholds less each paycheck instead of waiting for a lump refund
- Re-run the IRS Withholding Estimator after any life event: marriage, new baby, job change, side income, or home purchase
- Caution: Don’t underwithhold — owing over $1,000 at filing triggers an underpayment penalty. Target a small refund ($200–500) as a safety margin.
The One Big Beautiful Bill deductions are temporary — they sunset after December 31, 2028. If you’re eligible, claiming them now maximizes your window. Unlike most deductions, these are above-the-line, meaning you benefit even if you take the standard deduction. You can also ask your employer to adjust W-4 withholding to account for these deductions, so the savings show up in every paycheck — not just at filing.
- Tipped workers: Ensure ALL tips are reported on W-2 Box 7. Unreported cash tips = lost deduction. The $25,000 cap covers most tipped workers fully.
- Overtime workers: Verify your employer separates the overtime premium on your pay stub. Only the “half” of time-and-a-half is deductible (not the base rate).
- Car owners: Check your vehicle’s VIN at NHTSA.gov — “final assembly in the U.S.” is required. Keep your 1098-INT or lender statement.
- Seniors 65+: This stacks on top of the existing $1,600 senior standard deduction addition — total extra deduction can reach $7,600 single or $15,200 MFJ.
As a sole proprietor, you pay 15.3% self-employment tax on your entire net profit. By electing S-Corp status (Form 2553), you split your business income into a “reasonable salary” (subject to FICA) and distributions (exempt from FICA). On $120,000 net profit with a $70,000 salary, you save 15.3% on the $50,000 in distributions = $7,650/year. Add the 20% QBI deduction on distributions and the savings compound.
- The breakeven point is typically around $50,000–60,000 in net SE profit, accounting for additional payroll costs ($1,000–2,500/year for payroll service + S-Corp return filing)
- Your “reasonable salary” must be justifiable — IRS scrutinizes too-low salaries. Research comparable W-2 salaries for your role on BLS.gov.
- Don’t forget the QBI (Section 199A) deduction — 20% of your qualified business income is deductible, saving an additional ~$2,200 per $50K at the 22% bracket.
- Deadline: S-Corp election via Form 2553 must be filed within 75 days of the tax year start — or request late election relief under Rev. Proc. 2013-30.
State income tax is the single largest variable in take-home pay after federal tax. Nine states (Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming) charge 0% income tax. Moving from California (13.3% top rate) or New York (10.9%) to a no-tax state on a $100K salary can boost your annual take-home by $8,000–$13,000. For remote workers, this is the most accessible “raise” available.
- Remote workers: Your tax obligation is typically based on where you physically work — not where the employer is located (though rules vary by state). Confirm with your employer’s payroll.
- No-tax state trade-offs: States without income tax often have higher property taxes (TX: 1.6% avg) or sales taxes (TN: 9.55% avg). Run the full cost-of-living comparison.
- Flat-rate states like Arizona (2.5%), Colorado (4.4%), and North Carolina (4.5%) offer a predictable middle ground between no-tax and high-tax states.
- Beware “convenience of the employer” rules: States like NY, CT, and NJ may tax remote workers based on the employer’s office location — not yours.
FAQs: Payroll Taxes, Bonus Withholdings, & Self-Employment Tax
Comprehensive answers to the most commonly searched questions about paychecks, withholding, deductions, FICA, and maximizing your net income — sourced from Google, Reddit, and tax forums.
Take-home pay (also called net pay) is the amount deposited into your bank account after all deductions are subtracted from your gross pay. Gross pay is the total amount you earn before any taxes or deductions. For example, if your gross salary is $5,000/month and $1,500 is withheld for taxes, insurance, and retirement, your take-home pay is $3,500.
Follow this formula: Take-Home Pay = Gross Salary − Pre-Tax Deductions − Federal Income Tax − State Income Tax − FICA (Social Security + Medicare) − Post-Tax Deductions. Start with your gross salary, subtract pre-tax contributions (401(k), HSA, health insurance), then calculate federal and state taxes on the reduced amount, subtract FICA taxes (7.65%), and finally subtract any post-tax deductions like Roth 401(k) or garnishments.
Your paycheck appears smaller because multiple deductions happen simultaneously:
- Federal income tax: 10–37% depending on your bracket (most W-2 workers fall in the 12% or 22% bracket)
- FICA taxes: 7.65% (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare) — this alone takes nearly 8 cents of every dollar
- State income tax: 0–13.3% depending on your state
- Benefits: Health insurance, 401(k), HSA, dental, vision, life insurance — these can add another 5–15%
Combined, it’s common for 25–35% of your gross pay to be deducted before you see a dime.
Gross pay is your total earnings before anything is subtracted. Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is your gross income minus specific “above-the-line” deductions like 401(k) contributions, HSA, student loan interest, and the new OBBB deductions — AGI is used on your tax return. Net pay (take-home pay) is what actually lands in your bank account after all taxes and deductions are withheld from your paycheck.
Pay frequency doesn’t change your annual take-home pay, but it can slightly affect each paycheck’s withholding. Bi-weekly (26 paychecks) means each check is smaller than semi-monthly (24 paychecks), though you get 2 extra paychecks per year. Some months with bi-weekly pay have 3 paydays — those are great budget months. The IRS withholding tables are calibrated for each frequency, so the annual total remains approximately the same.
For a single filer earning $60,000 in a typical state, expect roughly:
- Federal income tax: ~8–10% effective rate (~$5,500)
- FICA: 7.65% (~$4,590)
- State tax: 3–6% (~$2,400 average)
- Total tax burden: ~20–24% (~$12,500–$14,500)
This means your take-home is about $45,500–$47,500 on a $60K salary, or roughly $1,750–$1,830 per bi-weekly paycheck before any benefits deductions.
A pay stub shows the breakdown of your earnings and deductions for each pay period. Key line items include:
- Gross Pay: Total earnings before deductions
- Federal W/H: Federal income tax withheld
- SS (OASDI): Social Security tax (6.2%)
- Medicare: Medicare tax (1.45%)
- State W/H: State income tax withheld
- Local W/H: City or county tax (if applicable — e.g., NYC, Philadelphia)
- 401(k) / 403(b): Pre-tax retirement contributions
- Health/Dental/Vision: Insurance premium deductions
- YTD (Year-to-Date): Running total for the calendar year
The 2026 federal tax rates remain at seven brackets: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, and 37%. For a single filer, the 10% bracket covers the first $11,925, 12% covers $11,926–$48,475, 22% covers $48,476–$103,350, and so on. For married filing jointly, each bracket is roughly doubled. These rates were preserved by the One Big Beautiful Bill Act through 2028 — without it, rates would have reverted to the pre-2017 levels.
Your marginal rate is the percentage applied to your last (highest) dollar of income — it’s the bracket you “fall into.” Your effective rate is the average percentage across all your income, calculated as total tax ÷ total income. For example, a single filer earning $80,000 has a marginal rate of 22% but an effective rate of only about 14%. This is because the first $11,925 is taxed at just 10%, the next chunk at 12%, and only the amount above $48,475 hits 22%.
FICA stands for the Federal Insurance Contributions Act and funds two programs: Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%), totaling 7.65% of your gross wages. Your employer also pays a matching 7.65%, making the true cost 15.3%. Social Security tax has a wage cap — in 2026, you stop paying the 6.2% once you earn $184,500. Medicare has no cap, and earners above $200,000 (single) pay an additional 0.9% Medicare surtax. FICA is deducted from every paycheck regardless of deductions or credits — there is no avoiding it as a W-2 employee.
No. Social Security tax (6.2%) only applies up to the annual wage base — $184,500 in 2026. Once your year-to-date earnings reach that cap, you stop paying SS tax for the rest of the year. This means your paychecks later in the year may be slightly larger. Medicare (1.45%) has no cap — it applies to all wages, and high earners ($200K+ single / $250K+ MFJ) pay an additional 0.9% surtax on earnings above those thresholds.
Nine states have zero state income tax: Alaska, Florida, Nevada, New Hampshire, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, and Wyoming. Yes, this meaningfully boosts take-home pay — a $100,000 salary in Texas yields roughly $8,000–$9,000 more per year than the same salary in California (top rate 13.3%) or New York (top rate 10.9%). However, no-tax states often compensate with higher property taxes, sales taxes, or fees, so total cost-of-living should be evaluated alongside the tax savings.
Several things can cause paycheck fluctuations without a salary change:
- Annual tax bracket adjustments: The IRS updates withholding tables each January
- Benefits enrollment: New health insurance rates during open enrollment
- 401(k) contribution changes: You may have adjusted your percentage
- Hitting the SS wage cap: Once you earn $184,500, SS deductions stop — your check gets a bump
- Bonus or commission: Supplemental wages are withheld at a flat 22% federal rate, which can differ from your normal rate
- W-4 update: Any changes you made to your withholding form
Bonuses and supplemental wages are typically withheld at a flat 22% federal rate (37% if the bonus exceeds $1 million). This isn’t your actual tax rate — it’s just the withholding rate. At tax time, the bonus is added to your total income and taxed at your actual marginal rate. If your real effective rate is lower than 22%, you’ll get some back as a refund. If you’re in the 24%+ bracket, you may owe a small additional amount. FICA (7.65%) is also deducted from bonuses, plus state tax.
Self-employed individuals pay both halves of FICA — the employee’s 7.65% AND the employer’s 7.65% — totaling 15.3% in self-employment tax before any income tax. A W-2 employee only sees the 7.65% employee share; their employer pays the other half. On $100,000 in net self-employment income, you’d owe ~$14,130 in SE tax alone, plus federal and state income tax. However, you can deduct 50% of SE tax as an above-the-line deduction, and the 20% QBI deduction can further reduce your income tax burden.
The 2026 standard deduction amounts are:
- Single: $15,000
- Married Filing Jointly: $30,000
- Married Filing Separately: $15,000
- Head of Household: $22,500
Taxpayers age 65+ get an additional $1,600 (single) or $1,300 per spouse (married). The standard deduction reduces your taxable income — it’s not a dollar-for-dollar credit. At the 22% bracket, the $15,000 single standard deduction saves $3,300 in federal tax.
Pre-tax deductions (traditional 401(k), HSA, health insurance premiums, FSA) are subtracted from your gross pay before federal and state income taxes are calculated. This reduces your taxable income and lowers your tax bill. Post-tax deductions (Roth 401(k), Roth IRA, union dues, garnishments, some life insurance) are taken after taxes. They don’t reduce your current tax burden, but some (like Roth) offer tax-free growth and withdrawals in retirement. Pre-tax deductions give you an immediate paycheck boost; post-tax deductions provide future tax benefits.
A traditional 401(k) contribution reduces your taxable income, meaning you save money on income tax immediately. If you contribute $500/month and you’re in the 22% federal bracket + 5% state, you save $135/month in taxes — so your actual paycheck only decreases by $365, not $500. The 2026 contribution limit is $23,500 ($31,000 if age 50+). A Roth 401(k) contribution, however, comes from after-tax dollars — your paycheck decreases by the full contribution amount, but withdrawals in retirement are tax-free.
Employer-sponsored health insurance premiums are almost always pre-tax — deducted through a Section 125 (cafeteria) plan before federal income tax, state income tax, and usually FICA. This means a $300/month premium only reduces your take-home by about $220 (at the 22% bracket + FICA). If you purchase insurance independently on the marketplace, you can deduct premiums on your tax return if you’re self-employed, or claim the Premium Tax Credit if you qualify.
A Health Savings Account (HSA) is the only triple-tax-advantaged account in the U.S. tax code:
- Tax-deductible going in: Reduces your taxable income AND avoids FICA (7.65%)
- Tax-free growth: Investment gains are never taxed
- Tax-free withdrawals: For qualified medical expenses at any age
The 2026 limits are $4,300 (individual) or $8,550 (family). After age 65, you can withdraw for any purpose — you’ll just pay income tax (like a traditional IRA) but no penalty. It’s effectively a super-powered retirement account with a medical spending bonus.
The Child Tax Credit (CTC) provides up to $2,000 per qualifying child under age 17. Up to $1,700 is refundable (meaning you can get it even if you owe $0 in tax). Unlike a deduction, a credit directly reduces your tax bill dollar-for-dollar. You can claim it on your W-4 (Step 3) so your employer withholds less each paycheck — effectively increasing your take-home pay by ~$167/month per child instead of waiting for a lump refund. The credit begins phasing out at $200,000 MAGI (single) or $400,000 (MFJ).
The No Tax on Tips provision, part of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, allows W-2 workers to deduct up to $25,000 in reported tip income from their federal taxable income. Tips must be reported on your W-2 Box 7. This is an above-the-line deduction — you don’t need to itemize. It reduces income tax only; FICA (7.65%) is still owed on tips. The deduction phases out starting at $150,000 MAGI (single) or $300,000 (MFJ). Self-employed tip earners (1099) do not qualify. It’s effective for tax years 2025–2028.
This deduction covers the premium portion of qualified overtime pay — specifically, the extra 50% of time-and-a-half. If your regular rate is $30/hr and overtime rate is $45/hr, only the $15/hr premium is deductible — not the base $30. The cap is $12,500 (single/HOH) or $25,000 (MFJ). Overtime must be FLSA-qualified and reported on your W-2. Salaried exempt employees who don’t receive overtime under FLSA rules don’t qualify. Phase-out begins at $150,000 (single) / $300,000 (MFJ).
Yes — you can deduct up to $10,000/year in interest on a qualified vehicle loan. The vehicle must have its final assembly in the United States (check the VIN’s plant code or NHTSA database). Both new and used vehicles qualify, and loans originated before 2025 are eligible. Only the interest portion of your payment counts — not principal. Refinanced loans also qualify. Phase-out begins at $100,000 MAGI (single) / $200,000 (MFJ). This is an above-the-line deduction effective 2025–2028.
Taxpayers age 65 or older can claim an additional $6,000 deduction ($12,000 for married couples where both are 65+). This is in addition to the existing senior standard deduction addition ($1,600 single / $1,300 married per spouse). A single senior could have a total standard deduction of $15,000 + $1,600 + $6,000 = $22,600. Phase-out begins at $75,000 MAGI (single) / $150,000 (MFJ). MFS filers are excluded. Requires a valid SSN (ITINs don’t qualify). Effective 2025–2028.
The OBBB deductions (tips, overtime, auto loan interest, senior bonus) only reduce federal income tax. They do NOT reduce FICA (Social Security + Medicare) taxes. This is a critical distinction — even if the tips deduction zeroes out your income tax, you’ll still owe 6.2% SS + 1.45% Medicare on those tips. Similarly, the overtime deduction doesn’t affect FICA on your overtime pay. State tax treatment varies — some states conform to federal above-the-line deductions, while others do not.
To maximize each paycheck (minimize over-withholding):
- Step 3: Claim your full expected credits — $2,000 per child under 17, plus any other credits (education, dependent care)
- Step 4(b): Enter additional deductions beyond the standard deduction — OBBB deductions, large charitable donations, mortgage interest if itemizing
- Step 4(c): Set this to $0 unless you have a specific reason to withhold extra
Use the IRS Tax Withholding Estimator (irs.gov/W4app) to model your exact situation. Resubmit after any life change: marriage, new child, job change, or side income. Target a small refund ($200–500) as a safety buffer.
Financially, a bigger paycheck is always better. A large refund means you gave the IRS an interest-free loan all year. The average refund of ~$3,100 equals $258/month you could have invested, earned interest on, or used to pay off high-interest debt. If you invested $258/month at 7% returns, you’d have ~$3,260 at year-end — $160 more than the lump refund. However, if you struggle with budgeting, a forced “savings” through over-withholding may help. The ideal target is a small refund ($200–500) or a balance close to $0.
Traditional 401(k) gives you a bigger paycheck now — contributions reduce your taxable income immediately. Roth 401(k) reduces your paycheck more today but provides tax-free withdrawals in retirement. The rule of thumb:
- If you’re in the 22%+ bracket now and expect to be in a lower bracket in retirement → Traditional (pay less tax now)
- If you’re in the 10–12% bracket now and expect to earn more later → Roth (lock in the low rate)
- If unsure → split 50/50 for tax diversification in retirement
Yes — you can submit a new W-4 to your employer at any time. There’s no limit on how often you can change it. Your employer must implement the change within 1–2 pay cycles. Common mid-year triggers: getting married, having a baby, starting a side business, buying a home, or realizing you’re on track for a large refund. Use the IRS Withholding Estimator mid-year for the most accurate projection, as it factors in what you’ve already earned and had withheld.
Self-employed individuals have several powerful strategies:
- S-Corp election: Split income into salary + distributions to save 15.3% FICA on distributions (breakeven ~$60K net profit)
- QBI deduction: Deduct 20% of qualified business income — saves $2,200+ per $50K at the 22% bracket
- SEP-IRA / Solo 401(k): Contribute up to $69,000 (2026) to reduce taxable income dramatically
- Deduct everything legitimate: Home office, mileage ($0.70/mile in 2026), equipment, software, professional development
- Pay quarterly estimates: Avoid the 4–6% underpayment penalty by making 4 estimated payments (April 15, June 16, Sept 15, Jan 15)
Generally, the state where you physically perform the work has the first right to tax your income. Most states have reciprocal agreements — for example, if you live in New Jersey but work in Pennsylvania, you’d only pay NJ tax (not PA). However, some states like New York have a “convenience of the employer” rule — if your employer’s office is in NY and you work remotely from another state by choice (not necessity), NY may still tax that income. Remote workers should verify their state’s specific rules, as this has become a major tax planning issue since COVID.
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We are committed to accuracy and transparency. This calculator is an educational estimation tool — always verify results with a qualified tax professional before making financial decisions.
This Take-Home Pay (Paycheck) Calculator is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute tax advice, legal advice, financial planning guidance, or any professional recommendation.
Results are estimates based on the federal and state tax data available at the time of development and may not reflect the latest legislative changes, IRS rulings, or state-specific amendments. Actual take-home pay may vary due to employer-specific policies, local taxes, garnishments, union dues, and other payroll factors not modeled here.
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- Data sources: Tax brackets, FICA rates, standard deductions, and OBBB provisions are sourced from official IRS publications, the Congressional Budget Office, and the signed text of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (2025).
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- Regular updates: This calculator is reviewed and updated at the start of each tax year to reflect new IRS withholding tables, FICA wage bases, and legislative changes.
- Methodology: Calculations use the IRS percentage method for wage withholding, progressive bracket application, and standard FICA rates. SE tax uses Schedule SE methodology with the 92.35% adjustment.
- Does: Estimate federal income tax, FICA taxes (Social Security + Medicare), state income tax, pre-tax deduction impacts, and OBBB Act deductions for W-2, freelance, and S-Corp filers.
- Does: Model quarterly estimated taxes for self-employed individuals and S-Corp officer salary splits.
- Does: Apply 2026 tax brackets, standard deductions, and FICA wage base ($184,500 SS cap).
- Does not: Account for local/city taxes (NYC, Philadelphia, etc.), school district taxes, or special state surcharges.
- Does not: Replace professional tax preparation, CPA consultation, or IRS filings.
- Does not: Factor in employer-specific benefits, union dues, wage garnishments, or court-ordered deductions.
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