Net Income Calculator
Calculate your net income after taxes, deductions, and expenses. Get a clear picture of your take-home pay. Try this free financial calculator online.
Understanding Net Income vs Gross Income
Gross income is the total amount you earn before any deductions—your full salary or total business revenue. Net income is what remains after subtracting all taxes, deductions, and withholdings—your actual take-home pay. For most employees in the US, the gap between gross and net is 25–40%, meaning a $75,000 salary might yield only $47,000–$56,000 in actual take-home pay depending on location, filing status, and benefit elections.
Key deductions that reduce gross to net income include: Federal income tax—progressive rates from 10–37%, applied to taxable income after the standard deduction ($14,600 single / $29,200 married in 2024). State and local income tax—varies from 0% (Florida, Texas, Nevada) to 13.3% (California). FICA taxes—Social Security (6.2%) and Medicare (1.45%) on earned income, totaling 7.65% for employees. Health insurance premiums—employer-sponsored plans typically cost employees $100–$600/month. 401(k) contributions—reduces taxable income while building retirement savings. HSA contributions—triple tax advantage for those with qualifying health plans.
Our calculator provides an estimate using your effective tax rate (the average rate on all your income, not the marginal rate on the last dollar). For precise calculations, use a full paycheck calculator that accounts for your specific state, filing status, and pre-tax deductions.
Tax Planning Strategies to Maximize Net Income
Reducing your tax burden legally through proactive planning is one of the highest-ROI financial activities available. The strategies available depend on your income level, employment type, and life situation. Max out pre-tax retirement accounts: Each dollar contributed to a traditional 401(k) or traditional IRA reduces your taxable income dollar-for-dollar. At a 22% marginal tax rate, a $22,500 401(k) contribution saves $4,950 in federal taxes—and you'll be in the 22% bracket for that income whether you invest it or not.
Health Savings Account (HSA): Available if you have a high-deductible health plan (HDHP), HSAs offer a triple tax advantage: contributions are pre-tax, growth is tax-free, and withdrawals for qualified medical expenses are tax-free. No other account type offers this trifecta. The 2024 contribution limit is $4,150 individual / $8,300 family. After age 65, withdrawals for any purpose are taxed at ordinary income rates—making the HSA function like a traditional IRA with a medical expense bonus. Dependent Care FSA: Up to $5,000/year in childcare expenses can be paid pre-tax, saving approximately $1,000–$2,000 at typical marginal rates.
For self-employed individuals and business owners, additional deductions are available: home office deduction, business vehicle expenses, health insurance premiums (100% deductible), retirement plan contributions (SEP-IRA up to $66,000 or 25% of compensation), and business expenses that are ordinary and necessary to the business. A good tax professional typically saves far more than their fee through identification of applicable deductions and credits.
Building Wealth on Your Net Income
The gap between your net income and your spending is the foundation of financial freedom. This surplus—the savings rate—is the single most powerful variable in wealth building. A household earning $60,000 net and spending $55,000 (8.3% savings rate) will struggle to build significant wealth. The same household spending $45,000 (25% savings rate) accumulates wealth at a dramatically faster pace—not just because of the larger savings amount, but because they also need less money in retirement (lower expenses mean a smaller nest egg required).
The FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) community has shown that extreme savings rates (50–70% of net income) enable financial independence within 10–17 years, regardless of starting salary. This isn't achievable for everyone, but it illustrates the mathematical power of savings rate. Increasing your savings rate from 10% to 20% doesn't just double your savings—it dramatically shortens the time to financial independence because you simultaneously build wealth faster and reduce the target needed.
Building wealth on a modest net income requires prioritization: emergency fund first (3–6 months), then employer 401(k) match (never leave free money on the table), then high-interest debt payoff, then Roth IRA maxing, then taxable investment account. Even at $40,000 net income, consistently investing $500/month ($6,000/year) at 7% average returns grows to over $244,000 in 20 years—a meaningful asset base entirely achievable on a middle-class income through consistency and patience.
2024 Federal Income Tax Brackets and Worked Examples
The US federal income tax system is progressive — you pay increasing rates only on income within each bracket, not on all your income. Here are the 2024 brackets for Single and Married Filing Jointly (MFJ):
| Tax Rate | Single Filer | Married Filing Jointly |
|---|---|---|
| 10% | $0 – $11,600 | $0 – $23,200 |
| 12% | $11,601 – $47,150 | $23,201 – $94,300 |
| 22% | $47,151 – $100,525 | $94,301 – $201,050 |
| 24% | $100,526 – $191,950 | $201,051 – $383,900 |
| 32% | $191,951 – $243,725 | $383,901 – $487,450 |
| 35% | $243,726 – $609,350 | $487,451 – $731,200 |
| 37% | Over $609,350 | Over $731,200 |
Worked example — Single filer, $85,000 gross income:
- Standard deduction: −$14,600 → Taxable income: $70,400
- 10% on first $11,600 = $1,160
- 12% on $11,601–$47,150 = $4,266
- 22% on $47,151–$70,400 = $5,115
- Total federal tax: $10,541
- Effective federal rate: $10,541 / $85,000 = 12.4%
- Marginal rate: 22% (but effective is much lower)
Worked example — Married filing jointly, $150,000 gross income:
- Standard deduction: −$29,200 → Taxable income: $120,800
- 10% on first $23,200 = $2,320
- 12% on $23,201–$94,300 = $8,532
- 22% on $94,301–$120,800 = $5,830
- Total federal tax: $16,682
- Effective federal rate: $16,682 / $150,000 = 11.1%
These examples show why the effective rate is always lower than the marginal bracket — progressive taxation means only income in each bracket is taxed at that bracket's rate.
FICA Taxes: Social Security and Medicare
Beyond federal income tax, every W-2 employee pays FICA (Federal Insurance Contributions Act) taxes:
| Tax | Rate (Employee) | Rate (Employer) | Wage Base (2024) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Social Security (OASDI) | 6.2% | 6.2% | $168,600 (cap) |
| Medicare | 1.45% | 1.45% | No cap |
| Additional Medicare | 0.9% | 0% | Over $200,000 single / $250,000 MFJ |
Total employee FICA: 7.65% on income up to $168,600 (2024). Self-employed individuals pay both the employee and employer portions (15.3% total), though they can deduct the employer-equivalent portion.
Full worked example — $85,000 single filer with $5,000 in 401(k) contributions:
| Line Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross income | $85,000 |
| 401(k) contribution (pre-tax) | −$5,000 |
| Taxable income for federal | $80,000 − $14,600 = $65,400 |
| Federal income tax | $9,015 |
| Social Security (6.2% × $85,000) | $5,270 |
| Medicare (1.45% × $85,000) | $1,233 |
| State tax (example: 5%) | $4,000 |
| Total deductions | $24,518 |
| Net annual income | $60,482 |
| Net monthly | $5,040 |
| Net bi-weekly | $2,326 |
On $85,000 gross, this worker takes home $60,482 — a 28.8% total tax burden including FICA, federal, and state taxes. The 401(k) contribution reduced federal taxes by $1,526 (the $5,000 × the marginal 22% rate plus the 12% on some of it).
State Income Tax Comparison: Where You Live Matters
State income tax is one of the largest variables in your net income. The difference between states can amount to thousands of dollars annually:
| State | Top Marginal Rate | Tax on $100K Gross (approx) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| California | 13.3% | ~$5,500 | Highest top rate in the US |
| New York | 10.9% | ~$5,200 | NYC adds 3.876% city tax |
| New Jersey | 10.75% | ~$4,800 | High property taxes too |
| Illinois | 4.95% (flat) | ~$4,500 | Flat rate, no brackets |
| Colorado | 4.4% (flat) | ~$3,900 | Recently reduced from 4.55% |
| North Carolina | 4.5% (flat) | ~$3,600 | Declining rate schedule |
| Texas | 0% | $0 | No state income tax; higher property tax |
| Florida | 0% | $0 | No state income tax |
| Washington | 0% | $0 | No income tax; 7% capital gains tax on $250K+ |
| Nevada | 0% | $0 | No state income tax |
For a $100,000 earner, the difference between California and Texas can be $5,500+ per year in state income tax alone. However, states without income tax often have higher property taxes or sales taxes to compensate. Texas property taxes average 1.6% of home value — on a $400,000 home, that's $6,400/year, partially offsetting the income tax savings.
The 50/30/20 Budget Rule Applied to Net Income
Once you know your net (take-home) income, the 50/30/20 budgeting framework — popularized by Senator Elizabeth Warren in All Your Worth — provides a practical allocation guide:
| Category | % of Net Income | Example ($5,000/mo net) | Includes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Needs | 50% | $2,500 | Rent/mortgage, utilities, groceries, insurance, minimum debt payments, transportation |
| Wants | 30% | $1,500 | Dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, hobbies, vacations, non-essential shopping |
| Savings & Debt | 20% | $1,000 | Emergency fund, extra debt payments, investments, retirement beyond employer match |
Applying the framework at different net income levels:
| Monthly Net | Needs (50%) | Wants (30%) | Savings (20%) | Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $3,000 | $1,500 | $900 | $600 | $7,200 |
| $4,500 | $2,250 | $1,350 | $900 | $10,800 |
| $6,000 | $3,000 | $1,800 | $1,200 | $14,400 |
| $8,000 | $4,000 | $2,400 | $1,600 | $19,200 |
| $10,000 | $5,000 | $3,000 | $2,000 | $24,000 |
In high-cost cities (San Francisco, New York, Boston), the 50% needs allocation may be insufficient for housing alone. In these areas, many financial advisors suggest a modified 60/20/20 split, acknowledging that housing costs consume a larger share. The key principle remains: define your savings target first, then allocate the rest.
Self-Employment Tax: How Freelancers and Contractors Calculate Net Income
Self-employed individuals face a fundamentally different tax structure than W-2 employees. Understanding these differences is critical for freelancers, consultants, gig workers, and small business owners:
Self-employment tax (SE tax): Freelancers pay both the employee and employer portions of FICA — 15.3% total (12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare) on net self-employment income up to the Social Security wage base ($168,600 in 2024). The Additional Medicare Tax of 0.9% applies above $200,000.
Worked example — freelancer earning $100,000 gross revenue:
| Line Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Gross revenue | $100,000 |
| Business expenses (office, equipment, software) | −$15,000 |
| Net self-employment income | $85,000 |
| SE tax (15.3% × 92.35% × $85,000) | $12,004 |
| Deductible half of SE tax | −$6,002 |
| SEP-IRA contribution (25% of net SE income) | −$19,749 |
| Standard deduction | −$14,600 |
| Taxable income for federal | $44,649 |
| Federal income tax | $5,117 |
| State tax (example: 5%) | $3,475 |
| Total tax burden | $20,596 |
| Net income after tax (before retirement) | $64,404 |
| Net income after tax and SEP-IRA | $44,655 |
The effective total tax rate on $85,000 net SE income is 24.2% — higher than a comparable W-2 employee because the freelancer pays the full 15.3% FICA rather than splitting it with an employer. However, the freelancer has access to a SEP-IRA ($19,749 contribution in this example), which shelters significant income from taxation and builds retirement wealth.
Quarterly estimated taxes: Self-employed individuals must pay estimated taxes quarterly (April 15, June 15, September 15, January 15) to avoid underpayment penalties. The IRS safe harbor rule requires paying either 100% of the prior year's tax liability or 90% of the current year's liability through quarterly payments.
Net Income Across Major US Cities: Cost of Living Adjusted
The same gross salary produces dramatically different purchasing power depending on location. Here's what a $75,000 gross salary looks like after taxes and housing costs in different US cities:
| City | State Tax Rate | Approx Net Income | Median 1BR Rent | After Rent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Houston, TX | 0% | $58,500 | $1,250/mo | $43,500 |
| Nashville, TN | 0% | $58,500 | $1,550/mo | $39,900 |
| Denver, CO | 4.4% | $55,800 | $1,700/mo | $35,400 |
| Chicago, IL | 4.95% | $55,400 | $1,800/mo | $33,800 |
| Portland, OR | 9.9% | $52,300 | $1,600/mo | $33,100 |
| Boston, MA | 5% | $55,200 | $2,800/mo | $21,600 |
| San Francisco, CA | 9.3% | $52,600 | $3,200/mo | $14,200 |
| New York, NY | ~10% (state+city) | $50,800 | $3,500/mo | $8,800 |
A $75,000 salary in Houston leaves $43,500 after taxes and rent — nearly 5× the disposable income of the same salary in New York City ($8,800). While NYC and SF offer higher salaries on average, the cost-of-living premium often exceeds the salary premium for all but the highest earners. Remote workers earning big-city salaries while living in low-cost areas capture the best of both worlds — a strategy that has accelerated since 2020.
Paycheck Frequency: How It Affects Your Monthly Budget
How often you're paid affects your monthly cash flow planning. The same annual net income feels different depending on paycheck frequency:
| Pay Frequency | Paychecks per Year | Per Check ($60K net) | Monthly Income | Two "Extra" Checks? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly | 52 | $1,154 | ~$5,000 | 4 months have 5 checks |
| Bi-weekly | 26 | $2,308 | ~$5,000 | 2 months have 3 checks |
| Semi-monthly | 24 | $2,500 | $5,000 | No — always exactly 2/month |
| Monthly | 12 | $5,000 | $5,000 | No |
Bi-weekly pay (every two weeks) is the most common in the US. The key budgeting insight: build your monthly budget around 2 paychecks per month, and treat the 2 "extra" three-paycheck months as bonus savings opportunities. This alone can add $4,616 per year to savings on a $60,000 net income without changing your spending habits.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an effective tax rate vs marginal tax rate?
The marginal tax rate is the rate on your last dollar of income (e.g., 22% in the 22% bracket). The effective tax rate is your average rate across all income—the total tax paid divided by total income. Because the US tax system is progressive, most people's effective rate is significantly lower than their marginal rate. On $75,000 gross in 2024, the effective federal rate is roughly 12–14%, though the marginal rate is 22%.
How much should I contribute to my 401(k)?
At minimum, contribute enough to get the full employer match (typically 3–6% of salary)—that's an immediate 50–100% return. Ideally, maximize contributions ($23,000 limit in 2024, $30,500 if 50+). If you can't max it, increase by 1% each year until you reach the limit or a comfortable saving level.
Does moving to a no-income-tax state really save money?
Potentially yes, for high earners. States like Texas, Florida, Nevada, and Washington have no state income tax. On $150,000 income, moving from California (13.3% top rate) to Texas saves up to ~$15,000/year in state taxes. However, factor in differences in property taxes, cost of living, housing prices, and quality of public services—the full picture may be less dramatic than the headline tax rate suggests.