Calculator
2026 Federal Income Tax Calculator
A salary is not a paycheck. Enter your annual income, pick single or your filing status, and the calculator shows your real take-home after federal income tax, FICA, and the 2026 standard deduction — before you add a single benefit or adjustment.
That take-home number is the one your rent, groceries, and savings actually care about. Salary is a headline. Take-home is the deposit.
Estimates only. State tax uses simplified rates without state-specific deductions or credits. City and county taxes not included.
Every dollar coming in
Start with your basics, then expand the cards below only if they apply to you. Most users only need the top card.
Choose your state to add state income tax to the estimate.
Wages & Salary W-2 job income — the paycheck stuff
Self-Employment & Business Expand if you have 1099, freelance, side hustle, or rental income
Net after business expenses. Triggers SE tax (15.3% on 92.35% of net).
Net after mortgage interest, depreciation, repairs.
Investment Income Interest, dividends, capital gains — expand if any apply
Bank interest, savings, CDs, bonds. Taxed as ordinary income.
1099-DIV Box 1a minus Box 1b. Ordinary income rates.
1099-DIV Box 1b. Taxed at preferential 0% / 15% / 20% rates (same as long-term gains).
Assets held < 1 year. Taxed as ordinary income.
Assets held > 1 year. Taxed at preferential 0% / 15% / 20% rates.
Retirement & Social Security IRA distributions, pension, SS benefits — expand if any apply
Roth distributions are tax-free — don't enter those.
0–85% may be taxable depending on your other income.
Other Income Alimony, unemployment, gambling, other
Only taxable if divorce was finalized before 2019.
Pre-tax moves that change your real paycheck
A dollar in your 401(k) only costs you about 78 cents of paycheck — federal tax takes the difference. Same idea for HSA, FSA, and pretax health.
Retirement contributions 401(k), 403(b), Traditional IRA — pretax dollars
2026 limit: $24,500 ($32,500 if age 50+). Reduces federal taxable income.
2026 limit: $7,500 ($8,600 if age 50+).
Health-related pretax HSA, FSA, employer health premium
2026 limit: $4,400 individual / $8,750 family. Also reduces FICA when through payroll.
Use it or lose it. Reduces FICA when through payroll.
W-4 elections Extra federal withholding you've told payroll to take
W-4 step 4(c). Adds to every paycheck's federal withholding.
Deductions, credits, and April's verdict
What lands in your refund or what you'll owe — after deductions and credits do their final pass.
2026 standard deduction: $16,100 (single)
Credits Child Tax Credit, dependent care, education, other
$2,000 Child Tax Credit per child. Phase-out starts at $200k single / $400k joint.
Education (AOTC, LLC), Saver's Credit, dependent care, EV credit, etc.
From W-2 box 2 or your last pay stub × pay periods. Leave $0 to use the calculator's auto-estimate based on your Stage 1 + Stage 2 entries.
Federal Tax Bracket Breakdown
Only the income within each bracket is taxed at that rate — not your entire income.
| Rate | Income Range | Income in Bracket | Tax in Bracket |
|---|
Federal brackets, standard deductions, and FICA rates referenced against IRS publications at irs.gov. Last reviewed: 2026-06-04.
What do pre-tax moves do to my real paycheck?
Use the paycheck mini-widget first; the salary prose follows.
A $75,000 salary divided by 12 is $6,250 a month. Beautiful number. Wrong number.
Run it through the calculator (your filing status, the 2026 standard deduction, FICA included, the state you pick) and the same salary produces about $61,592 a year of take-home. That is roughly $5,133 a month, or $2,369 every two weeks.
The gap between the headline and the deposit is about $1,117 a month. That is not a rounding error. That is a car payment, groceries, and one "where did my money go?" conversation with yourself on a Tuesday.
What comes out of $75,000 before it lands
Three cuts. Federal income tax. FICA (Social Security and Medicare). State tax, where it applies. The default scenario uses no state tax to keep the math clean — pick your state in the calculator to add it.
| Step | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross income | $75,000 |
| 2026 standard deduction (single) | −$16,100 |
| Taxable income | $58,900 |
| Federal income tax | $7,670 |
| FICA (Social Security + Medicare) | $5,738 |
| State income tax (no state selected) | $0 |
| Annual take-home pay | $61,592 |
| Monthly take-home pay | $5,133 |
| Biweekly take-home pay | $2,369 |
The interesting line is not the salary. It is the monthly take-home — the number every other money decision depends on.
Take-home pay from $10,000 to $200,000
Same assumptions: single filer, standard deduction, FICA, no state income tax. Your state, benefits, credits, and deductions can move the answer.
| Gross salary | Federal tax | FICA | Effective rate | Monthly take-home |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $10,000 | $0 | $765 | 7.6% | $770 |
| $15,000 | $0 | $1,148 | 7.6% | $1,154 |
| $20,000 | $390 | $1,530 | 9.6% | $1,507 |
| $25,000 | $890 | $1,913 | 11.2% | $1,850 |
| $30,000 | $1,420 | $2,295 | 12.4% | $2,190 |
| $35,000 | $2,020 | $2,678 | 13.4% | $2,525 |
| $40,000 | $2,620 | $3,060 | 14.2% | $2,860 |
| $50,000 | $3,820 | $3,825 | 15.3% | $3,530 |
| $60,000 | $5,020 | $4,590 | 16.0% | $4,199 |
| $75,000 | $7,670 | $5,738 | 17.9% | $5,133 |
| $80,000 | $8,770 | $6,120 | 18.6% | $5,426 |
| $90,000 | $10,970 | $6,885 | 19.8% | $6,012 |
| $100,000 | $13,170 | $7,650 | 20.8% | $6,598 |
| $120,000 | $17,570 | $9,180 | 22.3% | $7,771 |
| $150,000 | $24,734 | $11,475 | 24.1% | $9,483 |
| $175,000 | $30,734 | $13,388 | 25.2% | $10,907 |
| $200,000 | $36,734 | $14,339 | 25.5% | $12,411 |
Two things to notice. First, the lowest salaries pay no federal income tax — the standard deduction wipes the bracket out — but FICA still applies. Social Security and Medicare do not pause for low income.
Second, the effective rate climbs as salary climbs, but never as fast as the headline bracket suggests. That is the bracket-stairs story, and the next section unpacks it.
Salary to hourly — and hourly to salary
Both directions answer with one formula and one shortcut. If you know your hourly rate, multiply to get annual gross. If you know your annual salary, divide to get hourly.
Full-time shortcut: hourly rate × 2,080 = annual gross (40 hours × 52 weeks)
Annual → hourly: annual salary ÷ 2,080 = full-time hourly equivalent
So $25 an hour at full-time is $52,000 gross. A $75,000 salary is about $36 an hour. A $100,000 salary is about $48 an hour. Drop the gross into the calculator and the take-home for a single filer with no state tax lands around $43,962 a year on $25/hr, or about $3,664 a month. The table below covers $15 an hour through $100 an hour so you can find your rate without doing the math twice.
| Hourly rate | Annual gross | Annual take-home | Monthly take-home | Biweekly |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $15 | $31,200 | $27,249 | $2,271 | $1,048 |
| $20 | $41,600 | $35,606 | $2,967 | $1,369 |
| $25 | $52,000 | $43,962 | $3,664 | $1,691 |
| $30 | $62,400 | $52,318 | $4,360 | $2,012 |
| $40 | $83,200 | $67,361 | $5,613 | $2,591 |
Part-time hours? Use real numbers, not 2,080. A $20-an-hour job at 30 hours a week for 50 weeks is not $41,600. It is $30,000. Hours do the heavy lifting.
Biweekly, semi-monthly, and the two-extra-checks rule
Pay frequency does not change your annual take-home — it changes the size of each deposit.
- Weekly: 52 checks a year
- Biweekly: 26 checks a year (every two weeks)
- Semi-monthly: 24 checks a year (twice a month)
- Monthly: 12 checks a year
Biweekly and semi-monthly sound like twins. They are not. Biweekly gives you 26 checks. Semi-monthly gives you 24.
Here is the trick that catches people: if you budget around two biweekly checks per month, you are using $4,738 in the $75,000 example. That works in most months. But two months a year, you get a third check — about $2,369 of extra deposit.
That third check is real money. Treat it like a planned bonus for savings, debt, or an annual bill. Building rent around money that arrives only twice a year is how optimism becomes overdraft.
Why your actual paycheck may not match exactly
The calculator gives a planning estimate. Your real pay stub may differ for any of these reasons:
- Your W-4 settings (the form that tells payroll how much federal tax to hold back)
- Health, dental, or vision insurance premiums
- 401(k), HSA, or other pre-tax contributions you have not entered yet
- Local city or county taxes that this calculator does not model
- Wage garnishments or post-tax deductions like Roth 401(k)
- Bonuses, overtime, or unpaid time off in that pay period
If the estimate is off by $20, that is normal payroll variance. If it is off by $300, check your pay stub line by line. The money went somewhere specific.
Brackets, deductions, credits
Why your tax bracket is not your tax rate
If you take one thing from this page, take this: tax brackets are stairs, not a trap door. Earning your next dollar does not retroactively re-tax every dollar before it.
That myth is the reason people turn down raises and refuse promotions. It is also why "I got pushed into a higher bracket" has done more damage than most financial advice ever invented.
The 2026 single-filer brackets, in dollars
Here are the layers a single filer's taxable income passes through. Taxable income means what is left after subtracting the standard deduction (or itemized, if higher). For 2026, single standard is $16,100; married filing jointly is $32,200.
| Bracket | Taxable income layer | Max tax in this layer |
|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $12,400 | $1,240 |
| 12% | $12,400 – $50,400 | $4,560 |
| 22% | $50,400 – $105,700 | $12,166 |
| 24% | $105,700 – $201,775 | $23,058 |
| 32% | $201,775 – $256,225 | $17,424 |
| 35% | $256,225 – $640,600 | $134,431 |
| 37% | $640,600+ | — |
Walk through your numbers. Take your gross of $75,000 and subtract the $16,100 standard deduction (single). Taxable income is $58,900. That income passes through these layers:
- The first $12,400 is taxed at 10% → $1,240
- The next $38,000 ($12,400 to $50,400) is taxed at 12% → $4,560
- The last $8,500 ($50,400 to $58,900) is taxed at 22% → $1,870
Total federal income tax: $7,670. That is about 10.2% of gross income — even though the headline bracket reads "22%."
Marginal rate vs. effective rate, plainly
Your marginal rate is the rate on your next taxable dollar. For your numbers, your marginal rate is 22%.
Your effective rate is the average rate across all your income. For your numbers, your effective federal rate is 10.2%.
Both numbers are useful, just for different questions. Use marginal when you are deciding whether a raise, overtime, or side gig is worth it. Use effective when you are checking what tax actually costs you across the year.
People confuse them and end up afraid of raises. A $5,000 raise that lands in the 22% bracket costs you $1,100 in federal tax on that raise — not on your whole income. You keep the other $3,900. The math is friendlier than the myth.
Standard deduction or itemized?
The standard deduction is income the IRS lets you subtract before brackets apply. You do not have to justify it. You do not have to keep receipts. You just take it.
| Filing status | 2026 standard deduction |
|---|---|
| Single | $16,100 |
| Married filing jointly | $32,200 |
| Married filing separately | $16,100 |
| Head of household | $24,150 |
Itemized means you list specific eligible expenses — mortgage interest, state and local taxes (capped at $10,000), charitable donations, certain medical expenses — and use that total instead.
You only itemize if your itemized total is higher than your standard deduction. For most people, it is not. The standard deduction is large enough that itemizing rarely beats it unless you have a mortgage with serious interest, big charitable giving, or specific medical situations.
Deductions vs. credits — same family, very different powers
This one trips up everyone, so it is worth slowing down.
A deduction lowers the income that gets taxed. If you are in the 22% bracket and you deduct $1,000, you save about $220 in tax (the 22% you would have paid on that $1,000).
A credit lowers the tax bill itself, dollar for dollar. A $1,000 credit cuts your tax by $1,000. Period.
That is why credits are stronger. A deduction works on the income being taxed. A credit hits the bill directly.
| If your federal tax before this is $7,670… | After a $1,000 deduction | After a $1,000 credit |
|---|---|---|
| Tax owed | ~$7,450 | $6,670 |
| Savings | ~$220 | $1,000 |
Common credits worth checking: Child Tax Credit (up to $2,000 per qualifying child under 17), Earned Income Tax Credit (for lower-to-moderate income workers), and education credits like the American Opportunity Credit. Some are refundable — they can lower your tax below zero and pay you the difference.
Am I getting a refund — or writing a check in April?
Use the refund/W-4 mini-widget first; the explanation follows.
A refund is not a bonus from the government. It is your paycheck money coming home late, wearing sunglasses, acting like it was on vacation.
Here is the math, with no mystery: refund or owed equals federal tax withheld minus your projected federal tax (after credits). If you paid in more during the year than your final bill, the IRS sends the difference back. If you paid in less, you owe.
The refund math, with the $75,000 default
Projected federal tax for the default scenario is $7,670. Now compare that to what your employer sent the IRS from your paychecks:
| Annual federal tax withheld | Projected federal tax | Result | Per biweekly paycheck |
|---|---|---|---|
| $9,000 | $7,670 | Refund ~$1,330 | ~$346 withheld/check |
| $8,500 | $7,670 | Refund ~$830 | ~$327 withheld/check |
| $7,670 | $7,670 | $0 (even) | ~$295 withheld/check |
| $6,600 | $7,670 | Owe ~$1,070 | ~$254 withheld/check |
| $5,200 | $7,670 | Owe ~$2,470 | ~$200 withheld/check |
Same projected tax. Different withholding. Very different April. Find your federal withholding on W-2 Box 2 if you have it, or multiply the federal tax line from a normal paycheck by your number of checks per year.
A big refund is forced savings with no interest
That does not make it useless. Some people genuinely need the guardrail. If every extra $50 disappears into random spending, a refund acts like a locked box you cannot pick.
But the locked box has a cost. A $1,330 refund means about $51 of your paycheck was missing every two weeks — about $111 a month — for a full year. If that $111 a month sat in checking while you carried a credit card at 24% APR, the math is quietly judging.
When a bigger paycheck is the smarter move
- You are carrying credit card debt above 15% APR — the cash now beats the refund later
- You do not have an emergency fund yet — small consistent deposits build one faster than waiting for April
- Your budget is tight in February and overflowing in April — the cash flow does not match your life
- You sometimes use credit cards before payday — that is a sign your withholding is starving the month
When a small refund cushion still makes sense
- You have side income or 1099 work with little or no withholding — a cushion prevents an April surprise
- Your income or credits shift year to year — being slightly over-withheld is safer than slightly under
- You know yourself: if you will spend every extra paycheck dollar, the refund is your savings system
- You already use the refund for a specific job — a planned payoff, insurance bill, or savings goal
How to actually change your withholding
Your W-4 is the form that tells payroll how much federal tax to take out. Update it through your employer or payroll portal.
Aim for a small cushion, not zero. A $500 refund is less "perfect" and more human. Real life has tire repairs and dental work that do not ask if your withholding is mathematically elegant.
After you update the W-4, check your next paystub. Payroll changes can take one or two pay cycles. If the next check looks off, fix it early instead of carrying a year of bad withholding into April.
401(k) and paycheck
How a 401(k) actually changes your paycheck
A 401(k) lowers your paycheck. That part is real. But with a traditional pre-tax 401(k), your paycheck drops by less than the amount you put in.
That is the part nobody explains at work. They hand you a benefits form like it came from a printer with trust issues, then expect you to make a retirement decision in 15 minutes.
The math, with your $80,000 example
Single filer in the state you picked. Say you put $6,000 a year — about $231 per biweekly check — into a traditional pre-tax 401(k). Here is what happens:
| 401(k) per year | Federal tax | Annual take-home cash | Monthly cash | Biweekly paycheck |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $0 | $8,770 | $65,110 | $5,426 | $2,504 |
| $6,000 | $7,450 | $60,430 | $5,036 | $2,324 |
| $12,000 | $6,130 | $55,750 | $4,646 | $2,144 |
| $24,500 (2026 max) | $4,480 | $44,900 | $3,742 | $1,727 |
The $6,000 row is the teaching example. You contribute $6,000 to your retirement account. Your annual take-home cash drops by $4,680. The difference — about $1,320 — is federal tax you no longer pay this year.
Plain English: every $1 you put into a traditional 401(k) hurts your paycheck by less than $1, because some of what would have been tax now flows into your retirement instead.
But it still hurts. A $180 smaller biweekly check is real money. That is groceries, gas, or the part of life that does not fit in a benefits brochure. So the goal is not "save as much as possible and suffer nobly." The goal is to save enough without breaking the month.
Pre-tax does not mean tax-free
The IRS is patient, not absent. A traditional 401(k) lowers federal income tax now, but you pay income tax later when you withdraw the money in retirement. A Roth 401(k) flips that — you pay tax now and qualified withdrawals come out tax-free.
Roth contributions have a bigger paycheck hit today because they use after-tax money. The tradeoff is later. Which one wins depends on whether your tax rate now is higher or lower than your tax rate in retirement — and nobody actually knows the future tax code.
| Choice | Paycheck hit today | Tax now | Tax in retirement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional 401(k) | Smaller | Lower | Usually taxed on withdrawal |
| Roth 401(k) | Larger | Same as if no 401(k) | Qualified withdrawals tax-free |
The employer match is part of your pay
If your employer matches your 401(k) contributions, that is not a perk — it is compensation you are choosing whether to claim.
Say your employer matches 50% of the first 6% of your salary. On a $80,000 salary, contributing 6% ($4,800) earns a $2,400 match. Your retirement account gets $7,200; your paycheck only feels the $4,800. Skipping the match is like telling payroll, "No thanks, keep the raise."
If money is tight, start at the match — even if it is painful today, the match is doubling part of your contribution. After the match, every additional percentage point is a paycheck-vs-future-self decision.
What rate should you actually pick?
Test it against your current take-home pay, not against a financial influencer's vibe.
- Try 6% (or whatever earns the full employer match) and check whether your paycheck still covers bills, food, debt minimums, and a small cushion.
- If that is tight, drop to 3% and raise it 1% every six months or after each raise.
- If 6% is comfortable, try 10% and see if it still works in a bad month.
- Perfect months do not exist. Build for the regular month, not the spreadsheet month.
Bonuses + side income
Bonus, side income, and the awkward checks
A bonus sounds simple until payroll gets involved. HR says $10,000. Your bank account says, "Let us all calm down."
The 22% rule (and why a bonus can feel taxed at 40%)
The IRS calls bonuses, commissions, and overtime "supplemental wages." When your employer pays a bonus separately, the most common method withholds a flat 22% federal income tax on bonus pay up to $1 million. Above $1 million, the rate on the excess can be 37%.
But 22% is not where the math stops. Social Security takes 6.2% (until you hit the wage cap). Medicare takes 1.45%. State income tax may add another 0-9% depending on where you live. And if your bonus runs through a 401(k) deduction, that comes out too.
Here is what a $10,000 bonus actually looks like at different deduction stacks. No state tax, flat method:
| Gross bonus | Federal (22%) | Social Security (6.2%) | Medicare (1.45%) | Estimated take-home |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $5,000 | $1,100 | $310 | $73 | $3,517 |
| $10,000 | $2,200 | $620 | $145 | $7,035 |
| $15,000 | $3,300 | $930 | $218 | $10,552 |
| $25,000 | $5,500 | $1,550 | $363 | $17,587 |
Add a 5% state tax to the $10,000 bonus and take-home drops from $7,035 to about $6,535. Add a 6% 401(k) deduction and it is closer to $5,935 — which feels like the bonus was taxed at 40%, even though the federal rate alone was 22%.
The money did not vanish. It got intercepted by four different lines on your paystub. Payroll is very good at ambushes.
Flat method vs. aggregate method
If your bonus is paid on a separate check, payroll usually uses the flat method — a clean 22% federal withholding.
If your bonus is paid combined with your regular paycheck, payroll often uses the aggregate method — treating the bigger check as if it were your normal pay, which can withhold significantly more upfront. You did not become a yacht person. You got one bonus. But the payroll system did the math like you did.
Either way, withholding is not your final tax bill. At tax time, your real bonus tax depends on your full annual income and what bracket it pushes you into. Over-withholding can come back as a refund; under-withholding can mean a bill.
Side income: the 1099 and freelance version
If you earn money outside a W-2 — freelance work, 1099 contracts, gig income, side projects — no one is withholding federal tax for you. That is your job now.
The IRS does not bill you quarterly. It expects you to bill yourself. People forget this. The penalties are not fun.
A working rule for most freelancers: set aside 25-30% of every freelance dollar in a separate savings account the moment it hits. That covers federal income tax, self-employment tax (the Social Security and Medicare you pay both halves of when there is no employer), and gives a small cushion for state tax.
Self-employment tax is the part W-2 workers do not see. As an employee, you pay 7.65% FICA and your employer pays the other 7.65%. As a self-employed person, you pay both halves — 15.3% — on top of regular income tax.
Quarterly estimated payments — the calendar that ruins April surprises
If you expect to owe more than $1,000 at tax time after withholding and credits, the IRS expects quarterly payments. The 2026 federal due dates are:
| Quarter | Income period | Federal due date |
|---|---|---|
| Q1 | Jan 1 – Mar 31 | April 15, 2026 |
| Q2 | Apr 1 – May 31 | June 15, 2026 |
| Q3 | Jun 1 – Aug 31 | September 15, 2026 |
| Q4 | Sep 1 – Dec 31 | January 15, 2027 |
For a freelancer netting $90,000 with $18,000 of business expenses, a rough quarterly target is your annual federal + self-employment tax estimate divided by four. The calculator above can ballpark federal income tax if you enter your net business income; add roughly 15.3% of net income for self-employment tax, then divide by four.
This is a planning estimate, not a tax return. The IRS Form 1040-ES is the official version. A CPA or tax software is the safety net if your income is uneven, your deductions are unusual, or your year is doing something interesting.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I estimate my 2026 federal income tax?
Enter your annual income, filing status, deductions, credits, and state. The calculator subtracts deductions, applies 2026 federal brackets, subtracts credits, then adds FICA and state tax if selected.
What are the 2026 tax brackets?
The calculator uses 2026 federal brackets for single, married filing jointly, married filing separately, and head of household. The bracket table shows how much income lands in each rate.
Does this include state income tax?
Yes. Choose your state to add a simplified state income tax estimate. Some states, including Texas and Florida, show $0 state wage income tax.
Does this include Social Security and Medicare taxes?
Yes. The FICA line includes Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes. These are separate from federal income tax.
What is the difference between marginal and effective tax rate?
Marginal rate is the rate on your last taxable dollar. Effective rate is your average tax rate across your income. Your marginal rate is usually higher than your effective rate.
How does the standard deduction lower my taxes?
The standard deduction lowers taxable income. For a single filer in 2026, this calculator uses $16,100. That means $16,100 is removed before federal brackets are applied.
Do tax credits reduce my refund or my tax bill?
Credits reduce your tax bill first. If withholding is higher than your final federal tax, that can increase your refund or lower the amount you owe.
Why is my paycheck lower than my salary divided by 12?
Your paycheck is lower because taxes and deductions come out first. Federal tax, FICA, state tax, health insurance, and retirement contributions can all reduce cash pay.
Why do I owe taxes if money was withheld from my paycheck?
You may owe if your withholding was lower than your final tax. That can happen after a raise, bonus, second job, side income, under-withholding, or life changes.
Is this the same as filing a tax return?
No. This is a planning estimate. It helps you understand the math before filing. Use official tax software, IRS forms, or a tax professional for your actual return.
What is my take-home pay on a $40,000, $75,000, or $100,000 salary in 2026?
Using the calculator's default assumptions (single filer, 2026 standard deduction, FICA included, no state tax), a $40,000 salary nets about $34,320 a year ($2,860/month). $75,000 nets about $61,592 a year ($5,133/month). $100,000 nets about $79,180 a year ($6,598/month). Enter your state and any pre-tax deductions in the calculator to refine the estimate for your situation.
How do I convert my hourly wage to annual take-home pay?
Multiply your hourly rate by hours per week by weeks per year. Full-time workers can use the shortcut: hourly rate × 2,080 = annual gross. So $25 an hour full-time is $52,000 gross, which nets about $43,962 a year ($3,664/month) using the calculator's default assumptions. Part-time? Use your real hours, not 2,080.
What is my biweekly paycheck if I make a given annual salary?
Take your annual take-home pay (from the calculator above) and divide by 26. On a $75,000 salary with default assumptions, that is about $2,369 per biweekly paycheck. Biweekly gives you 26 checks a year, not 24 — two months a year will have a third check, and it is worth planning that money before it arrives.
How does a 401(k) contribution affect my paycheck?
A traditional pre-tax 401(k) lowers your paycheck, but by less than the amount you contribute. On an $80,000 salary, contributing $6,000/year ($231/biweekly) drops your take-home by about $180/biweekly. The other $51 was federal tax you no longer pay this year. Roth 401(k) contributions hit your paycheck harder today because they use after-tax money.
How is a bonus taxed in 2026?
When a bonus is paid on a separate check, federal withholding is a flat 22% on amounts up to $1 million. Social Security (6.2%), Medicare (1.45%), and any state tax come out on top of that. A $10,000 bonus in a no-tax state nets about $7,035 with the flat method. The 22% is withholding, not your final tax — your actual bonus tax depends on your total annual income.
How do I update my W-4 to reduce my refund?
If you are getting a refund larger than you would like, you can adjust your W-4 with your employer or through your payroll portal to reduce federal withholding. Aim for a small cushion (around $500), not zero — real life has surprises that do not ask if your math is elegant. Test the change against the refund mini-widget above before updating, then check your next paystub to confirm payroll applied it.
How much is $15 an hour annually?
$15 an hour full-time (40 hours × 52 weeks) is $31,200 gross. For a single filer with no state tax in 2026, that nets about $27,249 a year — roughly $2,271 a month or $1,048 every two weeks. Part-time? Multiply $15 by your actual weekly hours and your weeks per year — that is the only honest version of the math.
How much is $20 an hour annually?
$20 an hour full-time is $41,600 gross a year. After federal tax (single, no state, standard deduction) plus FICA, take-home lands around $35,606 a year — about $2,967 a month or $1,369 per biweekly check. Drop $41,600 into the calculator at the top of this page and add your state to see your actual number.
How much is $25 an hour annually?
$25 an hour full-time is $52,000 gross. A single filer with no state tax keeps about $43,962 a year — roughly $3,664 a month or $1,691 every two weeks. The $25 row is the most-searched hourly rate for a reason: it is the line where many full-time workers cross from "tight" to "manageable" on a basic budget.
How much is $30 an hour annually?
$30 an hour full-time is $62,400 gross. Single filer, no state tax: about $52,318 take-home, $4,360 a month, $2,012 biweekly. That is the rate where 401(k) contributions start to make a visible dent in tax liability — try the contribution-rate mini above the FAQ to see what 5% would do to your paycheck.
How much is $50 an hour annually?
$50 an hour full-time is $104,000 gross. For a single filer with no state tax in 2026, that nets around $81,994 a year — roughly $6,833 a month or $3,154 every two weeks. At this income level you cross the 22% federal bracket on a portion of taxable income; the bracket walkthrough in Section 2 above shows you which slice gets which rate.
What is a $50,000 salary per hour?
A $50,000 annual salary works out to about $24.04 an hour at full-time (50,000 ÷ 2,080). Single filer take-home with no state tax: about $42,355 a year, $3,530 a month, $1,629 biweekly. If you are comparing a salaried role against an hourly offer, that is the apples-to-apples conversion before either side adds benefits.
What is a $75,000 salary per hour?
$75,000 a year ÷ 2,080 = about $36.06 an hour at full-time. Take-home for a single filer with no state tax lands around $61,592 a year, $5,133 a month, $2,369 every two weeks. If your job comes with paid time off you do not take, your effective hourly rate is even higher — that is a real number worth knowing.
What is a $100,000 salary per hour?
$100,000 a year ÷ 2,080 = about $48.08 an hour at full-time. Single filer with no state tax keeps about $79,180 a year, $6,598 a month, $3,045 biweekly. The leap from $75K to $100K only adds about $12 an hour on paper but only about $1,465 a month after tax — that is the bracket-stairs story at work.