W-4summer jobstudent intern
How should a student intern fill out a W-4 for a summer job? Here is what most student workers should put on each step, when claiming exempt is legitimate, and how a $576 weekly internship paycheck can change depending on your choices.
summer jobstudent workersfederal withholding
Why is federal income tax withheld from a summer job paycheck? Student workers are often surprised when payroll withholds federal tax, Social Security, and Medicare from a short-term job. Here is how withholding works, what numbers to expect, and when a W-4 change makes sense.
W-2Box 14pay stub
What is Box 14 on my W-2 in 2026? Box 14 is an employer-defined information box. Learn what common labels like CA SDI, NY PFL, union dues, and local taxes mean, what actually matters for your tax return, and what to ask payroll if the entry looks wrong.
Social Security taxmultiple jobsW-2
Worked two jobs in 2026 and saw Social Security tax withheld above the annual limit? Here is the 2026 math, when you can claim the excess on your tax return, when you must ask an employer first, and how much refund you may be owed.
W-4withholdingtax refund
Filed taxes in 2026 and got a refund that felt too big — or owed more than expected? Here is how to use that result to update your W-4, reset your paycheck withholding, and avoid repeating the same mistake for the rest of the year.
W-4side hustle1099
If you earn W-2 wages and extra 1099 side hustle income in 2026, your current paycheck withholding may be too low. Here is when to change your W-4, how much extra withholding to consider, and when a W-4 works better than quarterly estimated taxes.
H1Bresident aliennonresident alien
Most H1B workers do not pay higher tax rates than U.S. citizens when salary, state, filing status, and tax residency are the same. The real differences usually come from first-year residency rules, standard deduction limits, and state tax location.
remittance taxcash equivalentsmoney orders
The proposed 2026 remittance-tax rules do not just hit paper cash. They can also raise questions about money orders and cashier's checks used to fund international transfers. This guide explains what usually counts, what usually does not, and how much a $700 or $1,200 remittance can change.
remittance taxcash-funded transfersimmigrants
The proposed 2026 remittance-tax rules focus on cash-funded transfers, not every international payment. This guide explains what usually counts as cash-funded, what usually does not, how a $500 or $1,000 transfer changes, and what to check before you send money abroad.
H1Bdual-status tax return1040
If you moved to H1B in 2026, do not assume you automatically file Form 1040. Your tax return depends on your residency status, countable US days, and whether dual-status rules apply. Here is the clean way to decide between 1040, 1040NR, or a dual-status return.
H1BF-1 OPTFICA
If your first H1B paycheck in 2026 feels smaller than your F-1 OPT paycheck, the biggest reason is usually FICA. Here is the real math on Social Security and Medicare, plus what else to check on your first pay stub.
earned wage accesspaycheck deductionsearly pay
Earned wage access can help workers pull part of their pay before payday, but it usually does not change how federal withholding, Social Security, Medicare, or state taxes work. Here is what really changes on your paycheck in 2026, with real math.
bonus paycheckwithholdingsupplemental wages
If your 2026 bonus check looks way smaller than expected, it usually is not because the IRS created a special bonus tax. Here is how the 22% federal withholding rule, FICA, Medicare, and state taxes really affect your net bonus pay.
H1Bremote workstate tax
If you are on H1B and working from abroad in 2026, your employer may keep withholding California or New York state tax even when you are not physically there. Here is when that happens, how much it can cost, and what to do next.
biweekly paybudgetingpaycheck
If you are paid biweekly, 2026 may give you one or two three-paycheck months. Here is what those extra paydays really mean, how taxes work, and how to use the money without wrecking your budget.
salarybiweekly pay27 pay periods
Some salaried workers will see smaller biweekly paychecks in 2026 because their payroll calendar creates 27 pay periods instead of 26. Here is the exact math, who gets affected, and what to check before you panic.
remittance taxcash vs bank transferinternational transfer
The 2026 remittance tax only hits certain cash-funded transfers. See who pays the 1% tax, which payment methods are taxed or exempt, and what a $500 or $1,000 transfer really costs if you use cash, a money order, or a bank account.
OASDISocial Security taxpay stub
What is OASDI on my paycheck in 2026? It is usually the 6.2% Social Security tax. Learn what the label means, how to check the math, the 2026 wage base of $184,500, and when the line should stop.
year-end tax planningW-4withholding
A December withholding check can stop a surprise tax bill or an oversized refund. Here is how workers should review their final 2026 paychecks, adjust a W-4 before year-end, and use real numbers to decide whether to raise or lower federal withholding.
estimated tax paymentsQ3 estimated taxSeptember 15 deadline
The September 15, 2026 estimated tax deadline covers income earned from June through August. If you are self-employed, freelance, or earning 1099 side-hustle income, here is how much to set aside, what the safe-harbor rule looks like with real numbers, and how to pay the IRS before penalties start.
W-4withholdingtips
Filed your taxes and got a bigger refund than expected? Or owed money because your tips or overtime withholding was off? Here is how to update your W-4 mid-year in 2026, what numbers to use, and how much extra cash you may free up per paycheck under the OBBBA tip and overtime deduction rules.
severance paylayoffpaycheck taxes
Severance pay in 2026 is usually taxable just like wages. Many workers see 22% federal withholding plus FICA withholding right away, which means a $10,000 severance check may land closer to $7,035 before state tax. Here is how severance withholding works, why the final tax bill can differ, and what to check before you sign.
1099-KVenmoPayPal
In 2026, payment apps and marketplaces generally do not have to send Form 1099-K unless payments for goods or services are more than $20,000 and more than 200 transactions. That does not mean small gig income is tax-free. Here is what the rule changes for Venmo, PayPal, Etsy, and casual sellers.
household workernanny taxFICA
If you work as a nanny, babysitter, home aide, or housekeeper, the 2026 household worker tax rules can shrink your paycheck fast. Here is when the $3,000 FICA threshold starts, what gets withheld, what your employer pays, and why your net pay may suddenly drop.
estimated taxessafe harborunderpayment penalty
The 2026 estimated tax safe harbor can help freelancers, side hustlers, investors, and workers with extra income avoid IRS underpayment penalties. Here is the 100% rule, the 110% high-income rule, the 90% current-year option, and the exact quarterly math.
pay transparencysalary rangejob postings
Pay transparency laws in 2026 give many workers the right to see a good-faith salary range before or during hiring. Here is where salary posting rules apply, what remote workers should watch, and what to do if a job ad hides the pay.
tax refundunbanked workersdirect deposit
No bank account does not mean no tax refund. Here is how unbanked workers can get an IRS refund in 2026, the safest direct deposit alternatives, how long paper checks usually take, and the steps that prevent costly delays.
H1Bvisaimmigration
The proposed $100,000 H-1B fee is an employer-side cost, not a direct payroll tax. But it can still affect salary offers, bonuses, and sponsorship decisions. Here is the paycheck math workers need to understand.
401(k)2026 taxespaycheck deductions
The 2026 401(k) contribution limit is $24,500, with an $8,000 catch-up for workers 50+ and an $11,250 catch-up for ages 60 to 63. Here is how increasing your 401(k) changes your paycheck, why a traditional 401(k) usually does not reduce FICA, and what the real per-paycheck numbers look like.
W-21099OBBBA
If you have a W-2 job and 1099 income in the same year, OBBBA deductions can help in some places and do nothing in others. Here is how qualified overtime and tip deductions interact with side income, self-employment tax, and real paycheck math.
HSAhealth savings accountpaycheck deductions
The 2026 HSA contribution limit is $4,400 for self-only coverage and $8,750 for family coverage, plus a $1,000 catch-up at age 55+. Here is how payroll HSA deductions change your paycheck, how employer contributions count, and how to adjust mid-year without overshooting the limit.
commuter benefitstransit benefitspre-tax payroll
The 2026 commuter benefit limit is $340 per month for transit or vanpool benefits, plus a separate $340 for qualified parking. Here is how pre-tax payroll deductions change your paycheck, what counts, and how much a worker can realistically save.
IRS Free File2026 taxesAGI
The IRS Free File income limit for 2026 is $89,000 of adjusted gross income. Here is who qualifies, what is actually free, when to use guided software vs. Fillable Forms, and how workers can avoid paying for a simple federal return.
ITINimmigrantsIRS
Many immigrant workers are scared to file taxes in 2026 because of IRS-ICE data-sharing news. The risk is real, but so is the tax cost of not filing. Here is what changed, what the IRS officially says an ITIN is for, and when filing still makes sense.
EITCimmigrantsSSN
Some immigrants can claim the EITC in 2026, but the rule is strict: you, your spouse if filing jointly, and any qualifying child claimed for EITC must have valid SSNs by the tax return due date. If the primary taxpayer or spouse files with an ITIN, the EITC is usually off the table.
Trump AccountsSection 128working parents
Trump Accounts start taking contributions on July 4, 2026. Here is what working parents need to know about the Section 128 employer contribution rule, the $2,500 cap, the $5,000 annual limit, and what stays out of taxable income.
W-2Box 12tips
The 2026 W-2 adds Box 12 codes TP, TT, and TA. Learn what each code means for tips, overtime, and Trump account contributions, what numbers to expect, and what still gets taxed.
minimum wage2026 tax rulestake-home pay
Minimum wage by state in 2026 is not just an hourly-rate story. Here is what full-time minimum wage work looks like after federal tax, FICA, and state tax in high-wage and low-wage states.
F-1 OPTstudent workersFICA exemption
F-1 OPT workers are usually exempt from Social Security and Medicare while they remain nonresident aliens, but that does not mean their paycheck is tax-free. Here is how 2026 OPT paycheck taxes work, with a real $60,000 example and the mistakes to watch for.
1099-NECgig workersself-employment tax
For 2026, the 1099-NEC reporting threshold is $2,000 instead of $600. That change does not make small gig income tax-free. Here is what gig workers still have to report, when self-employment tax starts, and how to avoid a surprise bill.
Social Security taxOASDIwage base
Social Security tax in 2026 is 6.2% of wages up to $184,500. Here is when the withholding stops, how to estimate the exact paycheck where it drops to $0, and what to do if you had two jobs and overpaid.
PFMLpaid family leavepaycheck deductions
Seeing PFML, PFL, FAMLI, or a similar line on your paycheck in 2026? Here is what the deduction usually means, which states charge it, what real rates look like, and why the amount suddenly showed up.
student loanswage garnishmentdefault
If your student loans are in default, the government or a private lender may be able to garnish part of your paycheck. Here is how the 15% federal rule, the 25% court rule, and real paycheck examples work in 2026.
overtimeFICASocial Security
No tax on overtime in 2026 does not mean overtime becomes FICA-free. In most cases, Social Security and Medicare still apply. Here is the myth-vs-fact breakdown with real paycheck math.
H1BOBBBAtips deduction
H1B status alone does not automatically disqualify you from the 2026 tips or overtime deductions. But most H1B workers will not qualify for tip deductions, and many will not qualify for overtime because their jobs are salaried and FLSA-exempt. Here is the real tax math.
tax refundOBBBAtips deduction
Many workers are seeing bigger 2026 refunds because OBBBA added new federal deductions for qualified tips and qualified overtime. Here is the real math, who benefits, and how to tell whether your refund increased because of those rules or simple over-withholding.
W-4 2026tips deductionovertime deduction
The 2026 W-4 finally gives tipped and overtime workers a clean way to reduce over-withholding under OBBBA. Here is how Step 4(b) works, what numbers to estimate, and how much extra cash you may free up per paycheck.
remittance taxremittancesimmigrants
A new 1% remittance tax can add a predictable cost when you send money abroad. This guide explains what counts as a “remittance,” who pays, when it’s collected, and how much it costs with real $500 and $1,000 examples—plus a simple 3-step checklist to reduce fees legally.
overtimeOBBBAtax deduction
OBBBA created a federal income tax deduction for qualified overtime compensation for the 2025–2028 tax years. Here’s what counts as “qualified overtime,” who can claim it, the $12,500 limit ($25,000 joint), the MAGI phase-out (starting at $150k / $300k), and how much you can realistically save.
tipsOBBBAtax deduction
OBBBA created a federal income tax deduction for qualified tip income (up to $25,000) for the 2025–2028 tax years. Here’s what counts as a “qualified tip,” who can claim it, how the phase-out works (starting at $150k MAGI single / $300k joint), and how much you can realistically save.
CaliforniaSDICASDI
SDI (often shown as CASDI) is California’s State Disability Insurance payroll deduction. For 2026, the SDI withholding rate is 1.3% of wages (no wage cap). Here’s how to check the math on your pay stub and what to do if it looks wrong.
pay stubpaycheckpayroll
There’s no federal pay stub law — it’s state-by-state. Here are the 5 rule types, the 9 states with no requirement, what fields your pay stub should show, and a simple 50‑state checklist you can use today.
W-2tax returnpay stub
Your W-2 is the “receipt” for your year’s paychecks. This guide explains what each W-2 box means, how to spot common mistakes (Box 1 vs Box 3/5), and how to use it to sanity-check your tax return — with a realistic example you can copy.
tipstipped employeespaycheck
If you earn tips, your paycheck is a mix of hourly wages + reported tips — and both are taxable. This guide shows the exact math (FICA, withholding, tip credit), a realistic example, and a simple “estimate your take-home” method you can run in any state.
paycheckpay stubbudgeting
Weekly, biweekly, and semimonthly pay can have the same annual salary — but the per-paycheck numbers (and your budgeting) feel very different. Here’s the exact math, a $60,000 breakdown, and how to pick the best pay frequency for you.
overtimehourlypaycheck
Overtime is usually 1.5× your regular rate after 40 hours/week — but bonuses, different rates, and state rules can change it. This guide walks through the exact math with real examples and a quick “estimate your take-home” framework.
salaryhourlyovertime
If the annual gross pay is the same, salary vs hourly usually has the same taxes — the difference is overtime, benefits, and hours. Here’s a real $62,400 example in Texas vs California, plus an overtime scenario so you can see the numbers.
health insurancepaycheck deductionspre-tax benefits
If your health insurance premium comes out “pre-tax,” it can lower federal withholding and sometimes FICA too. Here’s how to spot pre-tax vs after-tax on a pay stub, what taxes it reduces, and how much $250/month can save you.
401(k)pay stubwithholding
A traditional 401(k) contribution usually lowers your federal (and often state) taxable income, which can shrink your income tax withholding — but it usually does NOT reduce FICA (Social Security + Medicare). Here’s what that means for your take-home pay, with simple formulas, tables, and a realistic paycheck example.
Medicare taxpayroll taxesFICA
Medicare tax is 1.45% of wages for most employees (no cap). High earners may also see an extra 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax above $200,000 in wages. Here’s how it shows up on your pay stub, what the thresholds mean, and real-number examples.
Social Security taxOASDIpay stub
Social Security tax is 6.2% of wages up to $176,100 (2025 wage base used for illustration). See how it’s calculated per paycheck, what “OASDI” means on your pay stub, and the exact max you can pay in a year.
FICApayroll taxesSocial Security tax
FICA is the 7.65% payroll tax that funds Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%). Here’s how it shows up on your pay stub, when Social Security stops at $176,100, and what you’ll pay at common salary levels.
pay stubpaychecktaxes
A simple, line-by-line guide to your US pay stub: gross pay vs net pay, federal withholding, FICA, state tax, pre-tax deductions, and the YTD totals that help you catch payroll mistakes fast.
payroll taxesFICAwithholding
“¿Por qué mi cheque de pago es menos de lo que gané?” Esta guía explica los impuestos sobre nómina en Estados Unidos (federal withholding + FICA + state taxes) con porcentajes claros y un ejemplo realista de $52,000/año para que entiendas tu net pay y sepas qué ajustar.
californiapaychecktake-home pay
Si trabajas en California, tu cheque de pago se reduce por impuestos federales, FICA y el impuesto estatal (y a veces SDI). Esta guía te muestra un ejemplo simple con $60,000/año, una tabla de deducciones, y 3 pasos para estimar tu pago neto y ajustar tu W-4.
remittancewiseremitly
If you send money abroad, the “fee” is only half the story. This guide compares Wise, Remitly, and bank wires using a simple $1,000 example, shows how to spot exchange-rate markups, and gives a 3-step checklist to pick the best option for your family.
L-1 visapaycheck taxeswithholding
L-1 workers usually pay the same payroll taxes as U.S. workers: federal withholding plus FICA (Social Security + Medicare). The big swing factor is state income tax — and your W-4 setup. Here’s what shows up on your pay stub, what’s normal, and a clean biweekly example.
ITINundocumented workerstax refund
Yes — in many cases. If taxes were withheld from your paycheck (or you made estimated payments), you may be able to file a tax return with an ITIN and get a refund. Here’s the exact checklist, what credits you can/can’t claim, and a clean refund example.
green cardpaycheck taxesresident alien
Green card holders usually pay the same paycheck taxes as U.S. citizens — federal withholding + FICA + (sometimes) state tax. Here’s what gets taken out, what changes when you’re newly arrived, and how to check your W-4 so you don’t get surprised at tax time.
pennsylvaniapatake-home pay
Here’s a clean $50,000 Pennsylvania example with a line-by-line tax breakdown (federal + FICA + Pennsylvania 3.07%), per-paycheck math, and 3 practical steps to keep more of your take-home pay.
illinoisiltake-home pay
Here’s a clean $65,000 Illinois example with a line-by-line tax breakdown (federal + FICA + Illinois 4.95%), per-paycheck math, and 3 practical steps to keep more of your take-home pay.
washingtonwatake-home pay
Washington has no state income tax, so most of what comes out of a $70,000 paycheck is federal withholding + FICA (plus any payroll deductions like benefits). Here’s a clean $70k example with per-paycheck numbers, a tax line-by-line breakdown, and 3 steps to keep more of your check.
texastxtake-home pay
Texas has no state income tax, so most of what comes out of a $55,000 paycheck is federal withholding + FICA. See a real $55k example with per-paycheck numbers, a clean tax breakdown, and 3 practical steps to keep more of your check.
californiacatake-home pay
California paychecks are more than just federal withholding + FICA — you also have California state income tax and CA SDI. See a real $80,000 example with per-paycheck numbers, what comes out of your pay stub, and 3 steps to dial in your withholding.
new-yorknytake-home pay
On a $75,000 salary in New York, your take-home pay depends on federal withholding, FICA, and New York state tax (plus NYC local tax if you live in the city). See a real baseline example with per-paycheck numbers and 3 steps to dial in your withholding.
floridafltake-home pay
Florida has no state income tax, so your take-home pay is mostly federal withholding + FICA. See a real $60,000 example with per-paycheck numbers, what comes out of your pay stub, and 3 steps to dial in your withholding.
washingtonoregontake-home pay
Washington has no state income tax. Oregon has one of the higher state income tax systems (but no sales tax). See real take-home estimates at $50k, $65k, and $100k — plus a simple checklist to decide which state wins for your budget.
floridanew yorktake-home pay
Florida has no state income tax. New York adds state income tax (and NYC residents pay city tax too). See real take-home examples at $50k, $65k, and $100k — plus a simple checklist to decide if the move is worth it.
californiatexastake-home pay
Texas has no state income tax. California has state income tax plus 1.1% SDI. See real take-home examples at $50k, $65k, and $100k — and a simple checklist to decide if moving is worth it.
wyomingwytake-home pay
Wyoming has no state income tax, so your paycheck is usually bigger than in nearby states. See a real take-home pay example, what gets withheld, and how to use a Wyoming paycheck calculator.
vermontvttake-home pay
Vermont has progressive state income tax. See a real take-home pay example, what gets withheld from your paycheck, and how Vermont compares to nearby states.
dcwashington dctake-home pay
DC has its own income tax brackets. See exact take-home pay estimates, what gets withheld, and how DC compares to Virginia and Maryland.
state-guidealaskapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Alaska in 2025. This guide breaks down federal withholding, FICA (Social Security + Medicare), and why “no state income tax” doesn’t mean “no payroll deductions.”
state-guidenorth-dakotapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in North Dakota in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA (Social Security + Medicare), and a side-by-side comparison with South Dakota, Minnesota, and Montana.
state-guidesouth-dakotapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in South Dakota in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA (Social Security + Medicare), and a side-by-side comparison with Minnesota, North Dakota, and Iowa.
state-guidedelawarepaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Delaware in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Delaware income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Pennsylvania, Maryland, and New Jersey.
state-guiderhode-islandpaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Rhode Island in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Rhode Island income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Massachusetts, Connecticut, and New Hampshire.
state-guidemontanapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Montana in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Montana state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Wyoming and South Dakota.
state-guidemainepaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Maine in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Maine state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with New Hampshire and Massachusetts.
state-guidenew-hampshirepaycheck
See how much you actually take home in New Hampshire in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, and why no state wage tax gives workers more net pay than many nearby states.
state-guidehawaiipaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Hawaii in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Hawaii state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Texas and California.
state-guidewest-virginiapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in West Virginia in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, West Virginia state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Pennsylvania, Kentucky, and Tennessee.
state-guideidahopaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Idaho in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Idaho state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Washington, Utah, and Oregon.
state-guidenebraskapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Nebraska in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Nebraska state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Texas, Iowa, and Kansas.
state-guidenew-mexicopaycheck
See how much you actually take home in New Mexico in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, New Mexico state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Texas and Arizona.
state-guidekansaspaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Kansas in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Kansas state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Texas and Missouri.
state-guidemississippipaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Mississippi in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Mississippi state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Texas and Arkansas.
state-guidearkansaspaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Arkansas in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Arkansas state income tax, and how your paycheck compares with Texas and Oklahoma.
state-guidenevadapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Nevada in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, and why no state income tax gives Nevada workers a bigger paycheck than states like Utah and California.
state-guideiowapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Iowa in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Iowa's new flat income tax, and how Iowa compares with no-tax states like Texas and Nevada.
state-guideutahpaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Utah in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Utah's flat income tax, and how Utah compares with no-tax states like Nevada and Texas.
state-guideconnecticutpaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Connecticut in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Connecticut state income tax, and why cost of living makes paycheck math matter more here.
state-guideoklahomapaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Oklahoma in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Oklahoma state income tax, and how it compares with Texas and Colorado.
state-guideoregonpaycheck
See how much you actually take home in Oregon in 2025, including federal withholding, FICA, Oregon state income tax, and why a no-sales-tax state can still hit your paycheck hard.
state-guidekentuckyflat-tax
See how much you actually take home in Kentucky in 2025, including the 4% flat state income tax, federal withholding, FICA, and the smartest ways to keep more of every paycheck.
state-guidelouisianaincome-tax
See how much you actually take home in Louisiana in 2025, including the new 3% flat state income tax, federal withholding, FICA, and the smartest ways to keep more of each paycheck.
state-guidealabamaincome-tax
See how much you actually take home in Alabama in 2025, including state income tax, federal withholding, FICA, and the smartest ways to keep more of each paycheck.
state-guidesouth-carolinaincome-tax
See how much you actually take home in South Carolina in 2025, including state income tax, federal withholding, FICA, and practical ways to keep more of each paycheck.
state-guidecoloradoincome-tax
See how much you actually take home in Colorado in 2025, including the 4.4% flat state income tax, FICA, and practical ways to keep more of your paycheck.
state-guidewisconsinincome-tax
Calculate your Wisconsin paycheck and understand state income tax rates, deductions, and how much you actually take home in 2025.
state-guidemissouriincome-tax
How much do you actually take home in Missouri? Tax calculator, withholding guide, and state income tax breakdown for 2025.
state-guidesmassachusettstake-home-pay
Calculate your take-home pay in Massachusetts. See how state and federal taxes affect your paycheck, plus deductions and tax-saving strategies.
state-guidestennesseetake-home-pay
Calculate your take-home pay in Tennessee. No state income tax means more money in your pocket — see the breakdown.
state-guideindianaflat-tax
Indiana paycheck calculator 2025: See exactly what you take home after state tax (3.15% flat), federal tax, FICA, and deductions. Compare Indiana vs high-tax states.
arizonastate-tax-guidepaycheck-calculator
Arizona paycheck calculator for 2025. See how much you take home after federal, state flat tax, and FICA. Includes state tax brackets, deductions, and take-home examples.
washingtontake-home payno state income tax
Washington has zero state income tax. Learn how your paycheck works in WA, see exact take-home numbers, and find out how to maximize earnings.
virginiatake-home paystate income tax
Virginia's state income tax tops out at 5.75% — and the top bracket kicks in at just $17,001. On a $65,000 salary, Virginia workers take home ~$51,146/year ($4,262/month). Full breakdown by salary, how VA compares to Washington and Maryland, and three moves to keep more.
new jerseytake-home paystate income tax
New Jersey's progressive income tax ranges from 1.4% to 6.37% — and that's before SDI and FLI hit your paycheck. On a $75,000 salary, NJ workers take home ~$58,308/year ($4,859/month). Full breakdown by salary, how NJ compares to New York and Pennsylvania, and tips to keep more.
no tax on overtimeOBBBAovertime pay
The OBBBA created a deduction for the premium portion of overtime pay — up to $12,500 for single filers, $25,000 for married couples. Here's what actually qualifies, the exact math, and how to update your W-4 to stop over-withholding now.
earned income tax creditEITC 2026W-4 strategy
The EITC can put up to $8,231 back in your pocket — but most workers don't know you can adjust your W-4 to stop over-withholding and see more money each paycheck instead of waiting for a refund. Here's the full 2026 guide with income tables.
tax refundpaycheckW-4 withholding
The average 2026 tax refund is $3,676 — but that money sat with the IRS for up to 12 months earning you nothing. Here's the honest math on whether getting more per paycheck beats waiting for a lump sum.
no tax on tipsW-4 2026OBBBA
The IRS released an updated 2026 Form W-4 with a dedicated line for the OBBBA tips deduction. Here's the exact step-by-step to start seeing more money in every paycheck — not just at tax time.
michigantake-home paystate income tax
Michigan's flat 4.25% income tax is straightforward — but Detroit, Grand Rapids, and Lansing add city income taxes on top. On a $60,000 salary, Michigan workers take home ~$47,927/year outside Detroit, or ~$46,487 if you live in Detroit. Full breakdown by salary, city tax comparison, and tips to keep more.
north carolinatake-home paystate income tax
North Carolina's flat 4.5% income tax dropped again in 2025 — down from 4.75% in 2024. On a $60,000 salary, you take home ~$48,032/year ($4,003/month). Full breakdown by salary, comparison to Georgia and Virginia, and tips to increase your take-home.
georgiatake-home paystate income tax
Georgia switched to a flat 5.39% income tax in 2025 — down from 5.49% in 2024. On a $60,000 salary, you take home roughly $47,661/year ($3,972/month). Full breakdown by salary level, comparison to Florida and North Carolina, and tips to keep more of your paycheck.
ACAhealth insurancesubsidies
Full ACA income limits table for 2026 by household size. See if your income qualifies for premium tax credits, how the subsidy is calculated, and how to apply.
ohiotake-home paystate income tax
Ohio has graduated state income tax from 2.765% to 3.99% — plus many cities add a local income tax of 1–2.5%. On a $60,000 salary in Columbus you take home roughly $45,900/year ($3,825/month). Full breakdown, salary table, and city-by-city local tax guide.
illinoistake-home paystate income tax
Illinois has a flat 4.95% state income tax — no brackets, same rate at $40k or $140k. On a $60,000 salary you take home $47,398/year ($3,950/month). Full breakdown, salary table, and Chicago vs. the rest of IL explained.
pennsylvaniatake-home paystate income tax
Pennsylvania's flat 3.07% state income tax means no bracket surprises. On a $60,000 salary, you take home $48,406/year ($4,034/month). Full breakdown by salary, Philadelphia local tax explained, and 3 moves to keep more.
californiatake-home paystate income tax
California has 9 income tax brackets and 1.1% SDI. On a $65,000 salary, you take home $51,154/year ($4,263/month). Full breakdown by salary level, how California compares to Texas, and 3 moves to keep more.
texastake-home payno state income tax
Texas has no state income tax — your only deductions are federal. On a $65,000 salary, you take home $54,113/year ($4,509/month). Full breakdown by salary level, plus how to keep more.
new yorktake-home paystate income tax
New York state income tax takes 4–6% of your pay on top of federal taxes. On a $65,000 salary, you take home $51,142/year — and NYC residents lose even more. Full breakdown by salary level.
floridatake-home payno state income tax
Florida has no state income tax — so your only deductions are federal. On a $60,000 salary, you take home $49,888/year. Here's the full breakdown by salary level, plus how to keep even more.
child tax creditCTC 2026OBBBA
The Child Tax Credit is now $2,200 per qualifying child for 2025 tax returns. Learn how much you get, who qualifies (SSN required — not ITIN), and how to claim it in your paycheck right now via W-4 Step 3.
no tax on tipsOBBBAtipped employees
The OBBBA no-tax-on-tips deduction covers jobs that "customarily and regularly" receive tips. Get a clear YES/LIKELY/UNCLEAR/NO breakdown for restaurants, salons, rideshare, casinos, delivery drivers, and more.
estimated tax payments1099gig workers
April 15, 2026 is TWO separate deadlines: file your 2025 tax return AND pay Q1 2026 estimated taxes. Here's who owes, how to calculate your payment, and how to avoid the IRS underpayment penalty.
IRS refund delayDOGEtax refund 2026
IRS refunds are taking longer in 2026 — and DOGE-driven staff cuts are a major reason why. Learn what's actually happening, real 2026 timelines, how to check your status, and what to do if your refund is delayed.
no tax on tipsOBBBAtipped employees
The OBBBA's "no tax on tips" law lets tipped workers deduct up to $25,000 in tip income from federal taxes. But it won't automatically raise your paycheck — here's exactly how much you could save and what to do right now.
ACAhealth insurancesubsidies
The ACA subsidy cliff returned in 2026. Here are the exact income limits by household size — and strategies to stay under them.
EITCtax refundPATH Act
Most EITC refunds land by March 2, 2026 for error-free direct deposit returns. Here's why the IRS holds them until February 15, what to check on "Where's My Refund," and how much you can expect.
27 de fevereiro de 2026 · 5 min de leitura
Ler guia →DACAimmigrantspaycheck
How DACA recipients are taxed, what deductions and credits apply, and how to file correctly — a complete guide.
ITINIndividual Taxpayer Identification Numberundocumented worker taxes
Millions of workers pay US taxes using an Individual Taxpayer Identification Number instead of a Social Security number. Here's exactly what gets deducted from your paycheck, what tax credits you qualify for, and what you're locked out of — with real dollar amounts.
H1Bresident aliennonresident alien
Your H1B visa does not automatically make you a resident alien for taxes. The IRS uses the Substantial Presence Test — 183 days across three years — to decide. Here's exactly how to calculate it and what changes on your paycheck when your status flips.
H1BF-1 OPTvisa taxes
Switching from F-1 OPT to H1B triggers four major tax changes at once: FICA kicks in, your residency status shifts, your tax form changes, and your W-4 needs an update. Here's what happens to your paycheck — with real numbers.
H1BFICASocial Security tax
Yes — H1B visa holders pay the full 7.65% FICA tax (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare) starting from their first paycheck. Here's exactly how it works, what you'll pay at different salary levels, and how it compares to F-1 OPT.
26 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →H1BvisaFICA
H1B visa holders pay the same federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare as US citizens — no exemptions. Here's a complete breakdown of your paycheck deductions, with real numbers at $75k, $100k, and $130k.
25 de fevereiro de 2026 · 7 min de leitura
Ler guia →W-4married filing jointlywithholding
If you and your spouse both work and both filed your W-4s as "Married Filing Jointly," your employers are almost certainly withholding less than you owe. Here's why — and the one checkbox that fixes it.
24 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →paycheck calculatortake-home paypre-tax deductions
Your online paycheck calculator says $2,940 but your actual deposit was $2,618. Here are the 6 most common reasons calculators get it wrong — and the exact inputs you need to match your real paycheck.
24 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →withholdingtax tablesJanuary paycheck
Your January paycheck is usually a little bigger — or occasionally smaller — than December. It's not random. The IRS resets tax withholding tables every year. Here's exactly what changes, why, and what it means for your take-home pay.
23 de fevereiro de 2026 · 5 min de leitura
Ler guia →W-4two jobsmultiple jobs
Working two jobs and doing nothing about your W-4 can leave you owing $2,000–$4,000 in April. Here's why it happens and the exact steps to fix it — three methods, pick the one that fits.
23 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →W-4withholdingfederal income tax
Most W-4 errors cost workers $500–$3,000 at tax time. Here are the 5 most common mistakes — with the exact numbers — and how to fix each one in under 10 minutes.
22 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →federal income taxwithholdingW-4
Checked your pay stub and federal income tax withheld shows $0? It's not always a mistake. Here are the 4 real reasons it happens — and exactly what to do about it.
22 de fevereiro de 2026 · 5 min de leitura
Ler guia →first paycheckFICAwithholding
Started a new job and your first paycheck looks nothing like your salary? Here's the exact breakdown of every deduction hitting that check — with real numbers for a $45,000/year salary.
21 de fevereiro de 2026 · 5 min de leitura
Ler guia →withholdingtax bracketsraise
Getting a raise but seeing less money in your paycheck is a real phenomenon — and it's not always a payroll error. Four specific reasons your take-home can drop after a salary increase, with real numbers.
21 de fevereiro de 2026 · 5 min de leitura
Ler guia →texastake-home pay$50k salary
On a $50,000 salary in Texas, your estimated take-home pay is $42,214/year ($3,518/month). No state income tax means you keep more than almost anywhere else. Here's the full breakdown.
20 de fevereiro de 2026 · 4 min de leitura
Ler guia →immigrantsbeginner guidetaxes
New to working in the US? This guide explains exactly which taxes are deducted from your paycheck, what your real take-home pay looks like, and how to put more money in your pocket — in plain language.
20 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →californiastate taxincome tax
California has the highest state income tax in the US — up to 13.3%. This guide breaks down the brackets, SDI, real take-home pay at common salaries, and how to legally keep more of your paycheck.
20 de fevereiro de 2026 · 6 min de leitura
Ler guia →pay stubpaychecktaxes
Every line on your pay stub explained — gross pay, federal tax, FICA, state tax, pre-tax deductions, and net pay. Know exactly where your money goes, and how to catch errors before they cost you.
20 de fevereiro de 2026 · 5 min de leitura
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