Estimate gross pay, taxes, and take-home pay per paycheck (2026 rates, simplified).
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross pay | $0.00 |
| Pre-tax deductions | $0.00 |
| Taxable wages | $0.00 |
| Federal income tax | $0.00 |
| State income tax | $0.00 |
| Local tax | $0.00 |
| Social Security (6.2%) | $0.00 |
| Medicare (1.45% + add.) | $0.00 |
| Total taxes | $0.00 |
Your paycheck is usually smaller than your “gross pay” because employers withhold payroll taxes (FICA), federal income tax, and sometimes state and local income tax. This Paycheck Calculator estimates your take-home pay by starting with gross earnings and then subtracting common deductions and taxes.
This page is built as an estimate tool. Different payroll providers and paycheck calculators can show different results because withholding depends on details you may not enter (W-4 settings, tax credits, itemized vs standard deduction, multiple jobs, local rules, benefit plan handling, and more).
Many “take-home pay” tools use their own assumptions about withholding tables and W-4 inputs. For example, one calculator may assume only the standard deduction, while another models extra withholding or applies state rules differently. Because of these differences, this calculator is best used to:
If you’re comparing paycheck timing, you may also like our Salary Calculator for converting annual salary into hourly, weekly, and monthly pay.
Most paycheck calculations follow the same structure: start with gross earnings, subtract pre-tax deductions, then estimate taxes on the remaining taxable wages. Below are the core formulas this estimate tool is built on.
| Pay type | Formula |
|---|---|
| Salary | Gross per paycheck = Annual salary ÷ Pay periods per year |
| Hourly | Annual gross = Hourly rate × Hours/week × 52, then ÷ Pay periods |
| Custom | Annual gross = Gross per paycheck × Pay periods per year |
Pre-tax deductions reduce taxable wages for many income tax calculations (and sometimes for payroll tax, depending on the benefit type). In this calculator’s simplified model:
Taxable wages (per paycheck) = Gross pay − Pre-tax deductions
A simplified bracket approach estimates annual federal tax by applying progressive rates to estimated taxable income. This step typically uses filing status and a standard deduction assumption:
Annual wages for income tax = Annual gross − (Pre-tax deductions × pay periods)Federal taxable income = max(0, Annual wages for income tax − Standard deduction − Additional annual deductions)Federal income tax (annual) = ProgressiveTax(Federal taxable income, bracket table)Federal income tax (per paycheck) = Federal income tax (annual) ÷ Pay periodsPayroll taxes are typically withheld per paycheck and include Social Security and Medicare. Social Security is capped at an annual wage base, while Medicare can have an additional rate above income thresholds.
Social Security tax = 6.2% × min(Annual wages, Remaining wage base)Medicare tax = 1.45% × Annual wagesAdditional Medicare = 0.9% × Wages above threshold (threshold varies by filing status)State and local rules vary widely, so this calculator uses an estimated rate approach:
State tax = Taxable wages × State rate (low/high/midpoint or custom)Local tax = Taxable wages × Local rate (user-entered %)Finally, take-home pay is what remains after deductions and taxes:
Net pay = Gross pay − Pre-tax deductions − (Federal + State + Local + FICA)
Here’s a simple example that shows the flow of a paycheck estimate. Use it as a reference when you change pay frequency, deductions, or state in the calculator.
$105,000 ÷ 12 = $8,750.00
$0 (so taxable wages stay the same in this simplified estimate)
6.2% and Medicare is 1.45% of wages (simplified). For this paycheck:
Social Security = $8,750 × 6.2% = $542.50Medicare = $8,750 × 1.45% = $126.88Net = Gross − Pre-tax − (Federal + State + Local + FICA)
Below is an example table format you can compare against your calculator output. (Values will change based on your tax method and state assumptions.)
| Item | Monthly amount |
|---|---|
| Gross pay | $8,750.00 |
| Social Security (6.2%) | $542.50 |
| Medicare (1.45%) | $126.88 |
| Federal income tax (estimate) | Varies by method |
| State income tax (estimate) | $0.00 (if state rate set to 0%) |
| Local tax | $0.00 (if set to 0%) |
| Net pay | Depends on federal withholding estimate |
Want to test another scenario fast? Change your pay frequency (weekly vs biweekly vs monthly) and watch how take-home pay per paycheck changes, even when annual income stays the same.
Two people earning the same salary can take home very different amounts depending on the state they work in. Some states have no wage income tax, while others use progressive brackets with higher top rates. This calculator includes a State selector so you can quickly compare take-home pay across locations.
0% (useful for no-tax states).If you work in one of these states, your paycheck may be higher because state wage income tax is typically not withheld:
| State | Typical wage income tax |
|---|---|
| Alaska | 0% |
| Florida | 0% |
| Nevada | 0% |
| South Dakota | 0% |
| Tennessee | 0% |
| Texas | 0% |
| Washington | 0% |
| Wyoming | 0% |
| New Hampshire | Typically no wage tax (special rules may apply) |
Behind the scenes, the calculator uses state rate ranges as an estimation reference. If you want to review the underlying state-rate source used for this page, you can check the reference list at the bottom of this calculator page.
Deductions can have a big impact on take-home pay because they can reduce taxable wages before income tax is calculated. This calculator includes a simple Pre-tax deductions per paycheck input so you can model common benefit contributions.
| Deduction type | How it usually affects taxes |
|---|---|
| Traditional 401(k) / 403(b) | Often reduces federal (and sometimes state) taxable income before withholding. |
| Roth 401(k) | Usually taken after taxes (does not reduce taxable wages for income tax). |
| HSA (Health Savings Account) | Often pre-tax for federal income tax; payroll handling can vary by employer plan setup. |
| Health / dental / vision premiums | May be pre-tax depending on plan structure; confirm on your pay stub. |
| Commuter benefits | Can be pre-tax up to allowed limits (plan-dependent). |
| Garnishments / post-tax deductions | Generally taken after taxes and reduce take-home pay directly. |
In this calculator, the pre-tax field is applied as:
Taxable wages (per paycheck) = Gross pay − Pre-tax deductions
This gives you a quick way to see how changes (for example increasing retirement contributions) could reduce income-tax withholding and impact your net pay.
If you’re comparing earnings across pay types (hourly vs salary), you may also like our Hourly to Salary Calculator.
Your annual salary might stay the same, but your paycheck amount changes depending on how often you’re paid. A weekly paycheck is smaller than a monthly paycheck because the salary is split across more pay periods.
| Pay frequency | Pay periods per year | Example formula |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | 52 | Annual salary ÷ 52 |
| Biweekly | 26 | Annual salary ÷ 26 |
| Semi-monthly | 24 | Annual salary ÷ 24 |
| Monthly | 12 | Annual salary ÷ 12 |
If you switch from semi-monthly to biweekly, your paycheck typically becomes slightly smaller because salary is spread across 26 paychecks instead of 24. But you get two extra paychecks per year, which can help with budgeting.
If you’re paid biweekly, a common planning trick is to treat those “extra” two paychecks as savings or debt payoff. The Paycheck Calculator helps you estimate how much those extra checks might be after taxes.
Your annual salary might stay the same, but your paycheck amount changes depending on how often you’re paid. A weekly paycheck is smaller than a monthly paycheck because the salary is split across more pay periods.
| Pay frequency | Pay periods per year | Example formula |
|---|---|---|
| Weekly | 52 | Annual salary ÷ 52 |
| Biweekly | 26 | Annual salary ÷ 26 |
| Semi-monthly | 24 | Annual salary ÷ 24 |
| Monthly | 12 | Annual salary ÷ 12 |
If you switch from semi-monthly to biweekly, your paycheck typically becomes slightly smaller because salary is spread across 26 paychecks instead of 24. But you get two extra paychecks per year, which can help with budgeting.
If you’re paid biweekly, a common planning trick is to treat those “extra” two paychecks as savings or debt payoff. The Paycheck Calculator helps you estimate how much those extra checks might be after taxes.
Payroll taxes (FICA) are not always “flat” across the entire year. Social Security has an annual wage base limit, and Additional Medicare tax can start once your wages pass a threshold. That’s why this calculator includes a YTD wages field.
In the U.S., Social Security tax is withheld at 6.2% for employees, but only up to an annual wage base.
Once your year-to-date wages reach the cap, Social Security withholding typically stops for the rest of the year
(for that employer).
This calculator uses your YTD wages to estimate how much of your next paycheck is still subject to Social Security tax.
Medicare tax is generally withheld at 1.45% of wages, and higher earners can also pay an
Additional Medicare tax of 0.9% on wages above a filing-status threshold.
If your wages cross that threshold during the year, the “Medicare line” on your paycheck may increase.
If your wages are close to the Social Security cap, part of your next paycheck may be exempt from the 6.2% Social Security tax. That can increase your take-home pay even if your gross pay stays the same.
The quickest way to get value from a paycheck calculator is to run “what-if” scenarios. This helps you see how changes to deductions, pay frequency, or location could affect your take-home pay.
Use this simple approach when testing scenarios: keep everything the same and change only one field at a time.
| What you change | What to watch |
|---|---|
| Salary / hourly rate | Net pay growth vs tax increase |
| Pre-tax deductions | Lower taxable wages and lower income tax estimate |
| State | State tax line and total taxes |
| Pay frequency | Per-check amount vs annual totals |
| YTD wages | Social Security and Additional Medicare changes |
If your goal is planning for a monthly budget, you can also convert your results into a month-by-month view using our Monthly Budget Calculator.
Image note: Replace the placeholder URL after uploading. Suggested image: a simple bar chart comparing Net Pay vs Taxes across 3 scenarios.
Because paychecks depend on withholding rules and your employer’s payroll setup, the best way to use an estimate tool is to match the inputs to your real pay stub as closely as possible. The tips below help you reduce the gap between an estimate and your actual paycheck.
| Pay stub field | Where it helps in the calculator |
|---|---|
| Gross pay | Confirms your salary/hourly calculations and pay frequency |
| Pre-tax deductions | Improves taxable wage estimate (retirement/benefits) |
| YTD wages | Helps estimate Social Security cap and Additional Medicare |
| Local tax line | Use it to set a local tax % (or keep it at 0 if not applicable) |
| State withholding | Use “Custom state rate” to better approximate your state line |
If you’re using this calculator to plan your budget, set a “conservative” estimate by selecting a higher state rate method (or adding a small buffer to deductions). That way your expected take-home pay is less likely to be overstated.
If you want to estimate your spending power after expenses, try our Budget Calculator.
One big reason New York paycheck results vary between calculators is local taxation. Many locations don’t have wage-based local income tax, but some areas do. If you compare your New York estimate to another site, the gap is often caused by whether the calculator assumes local taxes (or specific NYC rules) and how it applies them.
This calculator uses a simple percentage model:
Local tax (per paycheck) = Taxable wages (per paycheck) × Local tax rate (%)
Because local tax rules vary a lot, this is intentionally flexible. If another calculator includes local taxes automatically for a city (for example, an assumed NYC local tax), you can approximate it by entering an equivalent local tax rate here.
| Item to compare | Why it changes the result |
|---|---|
| Local tax included or not | Some tools auto-apply city taxes; this one applies local tax only when you enter it. |
| State taxable base | Different tools use different assumptions for state deductions/allowances and what counts as taxable wages. |
| Federal withholding method | Some calculators model W-4 tables; others estimate annual tax and divide by pay periods. |
| Pre-tax deductions handling | Payroll systems may treat certain deductions differently for state vs FICA. |
These sources were used to guide the estimate logic, tax thresholds, and state-rate references in this Paycheck Calculator. State and local tax rules can change and can vary by city/county and employer payroll setup.
| Source | Used for | Link |
|---|---|---|
| IRS – Tax inflation adjustments for tax year 2026 (IR-2025-103) | Federal bracket threshold anchors (headline thresholds) and standard deduction amounts for 2026. | IRS newsroom release (2026 inflation adjustments) |
| IRS – Revenue Procedure 2025-32 (PDF) | Detailed 2026 inflation-adjusted tax items (supporting document referenced by IRS release). | Rev. Proc. 2025-32 (PDF) |
| Social Security Administration – Contribution and Benefit Base | 2026 Social Security (OASDI) wage base used for estimating the Social Security tax cap behavior. | SSA: Contribution and Benefit Base |
| Social Security Administration – 2026 COLA Fact Sheet | Cross-check reference for the 2026 “Maximum Taxable Earnings” figure. | SSA: 2026 COLA Fact Sheet |
| IRS – Additional Medicare Tax (Topic No. 560) | Additional Medicare tax thresholds by filing status (e.g., $200k single, $250k MFJ). | IRS Topic 560: Additional Medicare Tax |
| WorldPopulationReview – Income Tax by State | General reference for income-tax-by-state context and comparisons. | WorldPopulationReview: Income Tax by State |
| AI Calculator Tax – List of US State Tax Rates 2026 | State income tax rate ranges reference list used for the state-rate selector (estimate ranges). | AI Calculator Tax: State tax rates (2026) |
| SmartAsset – Paycheck Calculator (competitor example) | Competitor feature reference (UI/inputs and expectations for a paycheck estimator). | SmartAsset Paycheck Calculator |
| Calculator.net – Take-Home Pay Calculator (comparison reference) | Output comparison reference used during QA checks (NY example comparison). | Calculator.net Take-Home Pay Calculator |