Salary paycheck calculator

Take-Home Pay Calculator

Gross salary is not spendable income. This gross-to-net calculator estimates the take-home pay that actually reaches your account — after income tax, social security, and payroll deductions — from an annual salary, monthly salary, or hourly wage, at any pay frequency. Use the simple global mode anywhere, or the sourced country payroll models for the US, India, UK, Canada, and Australia; compare scenarios and job offers, solve a target net backwards to required gross, and export a 12-sheet Excel workbook.

Transparent assumptions Works for any country Sourced US · India · UK · Canada · Australia models Per-paycheck, monthly & annual 12-sheet Excel report

Educational estimate only — not payroll, tax, or financial advice. Your payslip is the authority.

Take-home pay is what remains of gross pay after taxes, social contributions, and payroll deductions. Net Pay = Gross Pay − Income Tax − Social Contributions − Pre-Tax Deductions − Post-Tax Deductions − Extra Withholding; the per-paycheck amount divides the annual net by your pay periods (weekly 52, bi-weekly 26, semi-monthly 24, monthly 12). Pre-tax deductions shrink taxable income first; everything else comes off afterwards.

Simple estimateTax year: Your rates

Simple Global Estimate

Basic pay
$

How often the paycheck arrives — changes the per-paycheck amount, never the annual total.

Tax & contribution rates
%

Your average (effective) rate — total income tax ÷ income, NOT your top bracket rate.

%

Employee-side pension / social insurance, applied to gross pay.

Bonus, deductions & extra withholding
$

Taxed at the same average rate in this simple model.

$

Pre-tax deductions (pension, retirement plans) reduce taxable income before the tax rate applies; post-tax deductions only reduce the cash you receive.

$

Works for any country: you supply the average rates, the calculator handles pay frequency, bonus, and pre/post-tax arithmetic. For sourced brackets and caps, switch to Country Payroll.

Take-home per paycheck

$3,900.00

Monthly (12)

Monthly take-home equivalent

$3,900.00

Annual take-home

$46,800

Gross annual pay

$60,000

$5,000.00 per paycheck

Total annual deductions

$13,200

Effective deduction rate

22.0%

Net-to-gross 78.0%

Estimated take-home pay: $3,900 per month — about $3,900 per month and $46,800 per year.

From $60,000 gross, an estimated $13,200 (22.0%) goes to taxes, contributions, and deductions — you keep 78.0%.

Simple global estimate: a structured estimate using sourced figures — not an official payroll calculation.

Gross-to-net breakdown (annual · per paycheck · monthly)

  • Gross pay (salary / wages)$5,000.00100.0%
  • Total gross pay$5,000.00100.0%
  • Taxable income (estimate)After pre-tax deductions and allowances$5,000.00100.0%
  • Income tax−$750.00-15.0%
  • Social security / payroll contribution−$350.00-7.0%
  • Total deductions−$1,100.00-22.0%
  • Net take-home pay$3,900.0078.0%
LineAnnualPer paycheckMonthly% of gross
Gross pay (salary / wages)$60,000$5,000.00$5,000.00100.0%
Total gross pay$60,000$5,000.00$5,000.00100.0%
Taxable income (estimate)After pre-tax deductions and allowances$60,000$5,000.00$5,000.00100.0%
Income tax−$9,000−$750.00−$750.00-15.0%
Social security / payroll contribution−$4,200−$350.00−$350.00-7.0%
Total deductions−$13,200−$1,100.00−$1,100.00-22.0%
Net take-home pay$46,800$3,900.00$3,900.0078.0%

Gross-to-net waterfall

Gross pay$60,000
− Income tax−$9,000
− Social contributions−$4,200
= Net take-home$46,800

Where the deductions go

22%
Income tax · $9,000Social contributions · $4,200

Annual vs per-paycheck

Gross per paycheck$5,000.00
Net per paycheck$3,900.00

Export your gross-to-net salary breakdown, deductions, scenarios, assumptions, and disclaimer as an Excel workbook. Everything runs in your browser — nothing you type is stored or sent anywhere.

Quick answers

Take-home pay, defined

Take-home pay (net pay, in-hand salary) is what actually lands in your bank account after income tax, social security or payroll contributions, and deductions like retirement plans and insurance are withheld from your gross pay. Gross salary is the headline number in your contract; take-home pay is the spendable one.

How do you calculate take-home pay from gross salary?

Take-Home Pay = Gross Pay − Income Tax − Social Contributions − Pre-Tax Deductions − Post-Tax Deductions − Extra Withholding. Pre-tax deductions are subtracted before the tax is computed (they shrink taxable income); everything else comes off after. Divide the annual result by your pay periods for the per-paycheck amount.

Why is my take-home pay lower than my salary?

Because employers must withhold income tax, social insurance (Social Security/Medicare, NI, CPP/EI, EPF, the Medicare levy…), and any deductions you elected — retirement contributions, health premiums, insurance, garnishments, student loan repayments. Each is a real subtraction from every paycheck.

How much gross salary do I need for a target monthly take-home?

Approximately Required Gross = Desired Net ÷ (1 − effective deduction rate); at a 25% deduction rate, a 4,000 monthly target needs about 5,333 gross. Because brackets, caps, and credits shift with income, the calculator’s reverse mode bisects the full tax model instead of relying on that single formula.

How to use this take-home pay calculator

  1. Pick a mode. Start with Simple Estimate — it works for any country with the average rates you enter. Switch to Country Payroll for sourced US, India, UK, Canada, or Australia models, or jump to Scenarios, Net → Gross, or Compare Offers.
  2. Enter your pay. Choose annual salary, monthly salary, per-period salary, or hourly wage (with hours per week and weeks per year), and your pay frequency — daily through annually.
  3. Add taxes and contributions. In simple mode, enter your average income tax rate and social security rate. In country mode, pick the tax year, state/province/region, filing status or regime, and the module applies sourced brackets, caps, rebates, and contributions.
  4. Add deductions, bonus, and extras. Set retirement contributions, health insurance, HSA/FSA, EPF, pension, or salary sacrifice; mark deductions pre-tax or post-tax; add bonus (with the flat or ordinary method in the US), overtime, tips, and extra withholding.
  5. Read the results. See take-home per paycheck, monthly equivalent, and annual net, the full gross-to-net breakdown table, the waterfall and deduction donut, the effective deduction rate, and what the country model includes and excludes.
  6. Compare, reverse, and export. Use Scenarios for raises or higher contributions, Compare Offers for two jobs, Net → Gross for a target take-home, and Download XLSX for a 12-sheet, formula-driven Excel workbook built from your exact inputs.

Gross-to-net formulas

Gross annual pay

Gross = Salary OR Hourly Wage × Hours/Week × Weeks/Year

Monthly salary × 12; per-period salary × pay periods.

Gross per paycheck

Gross per Period = Gross Annual ÷ Pay Periods

Weekly 52 · bi-weekly 26 · semi-monthly 24 · monthly 12.

Taxable income

Taxable = Gross + Bonus − Pre-Tax Deductions − Allowances

Country modes subtract standard deductions / allowances too.

Income tax (estimate)

Tax = Taxable × Average Rate OR Σ Bracket Slices

Country modes use sourced progressive brackets minus credits/rebates.

Total deductions

Deductions = Tax + Social + Regional + Pre-Tax + Post-Tax + Extra

Everything that stands between gross and your bank account.

Net take-home

Net Annual = Total Gross − Total Deductions

Net per paycheck = net annual ÷ pay periods; monthly = ÷ 12.

Effective deduction rate

Rate = Total Deductions ÷ Total Gross

The share of pay you never see. Net-to-gross = 1 − rate.

Reverse (net → gross)

Required Gross ≈ Desired Net ÷ (1 − Deduction Rate)

The calculator bisects the full model instead — brackets honoured.

Understanding take-home pay

What this calculator does

This is a gross-to-net salary paycheck calculator. You give it what you earn — an annual salary, a monthly salary, or an hourly wage — and it estimates what you actually keep after income tax, social contributions, and payroll deductions, per paycheck, per month, and per year. A simple global mode works anywhere with the average rates you supply; country modes for the United States, India, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia apply sourced brackets, contribution caps, rebates, and levies for a named tax year.

It also answers the questions a single calculation can’t: three editable scenarios show what a raise or a bigger retirement contribution does to your net; the offer comparison puts two jobs side by side on usable cash; and the reverse mode finds the gross salary you would need for a target monthly take-home. Every mode exports a 12-sheet, formula-driven Excel workbook. What it never does is pretend to be payroll software — each country model lists exactly what it includes and what it leaves out.

Gross salary vs net salary vs CTC vs employer cost

Four different numbers get called “salary”, and confusing them is expensive. Gross salary is the contract number before any withholding. Net salary (take-home, in-hand) is what reaches your bank account. CTC — cost to company, standard in Indian offers — bundles gross salary together with employer-side costs like employer EPF, gratuity, and insurance, so it is always the biggest number and never the one you can spend. Employer cost is the same idea anywhere: gross plus employer payroll taxes (employer FICA in the US, employer NI in the UK, employer CPP/EI in Canada, super guarantee in Australia).

The order is universal: employer cost > CTC ≥ gross > taxable > net. This calculator keeps them separate — the optional employer-cost card shows the employer side without ever mixing it into your take-home.

Pay frequency, explained

Pay frequency converts an annual figure into paychecks: weekly = 52 a year, bi-weekly = 26, semi-monthly = 24, monthly = 12, quarterly = 4, semi-annually = 2, annually = 1. Daily pay is modelled as 260 working days. The annual total never changes with frequency — only the slice size does.

The classic trap is bi-weekly vs semi-monthly: 26 paychecks are each smaller than 24 would be (annual ÷ 26 vs ÷ 24), but twice a year a bi-weekly schedule delivers a third paycheck in one calendar month. Budgets built on “two paychecks a month” quietly misallocate those months.

Pre-tax vs post-tax deductions

A pre-tax deduction is taken out before income tax is calculated: a traditional 401(k) or pension contribution, EPF, HSA/FSA, salary sacrifice. It reduces taxable income, so its true cost is less than its face value — contribute 100 at a 30% marginal rate and your paycheck drops by only about 70. A post-tax deduction — Roth contributions, union dues in some systems, garnishments — comes out after tax and costs its full face value.

Two subtleties matter. First, “pre-tax” is tax-specific: in the US a 401(k) contribution avoids federal income tax but NOT Social Security and Medicare, while §125 health premiums avoid both; in the UK a net-pay pension cuts income tax but not National Insurance. Second, both kinds reduce your take-home — the pre-tax advantage is about taxes, not cash flow.

How bonuses and overtime are treated

A bonus is taxed eventually at your ordinary rates — but the paycheck withholding can look very different. US employers usually apply the flat supplemental method: 22% federal withholding on a separate bonus check (37% mandatory above $1M), plus full Social Security and Medicare. The calculator offers both the flat method and the ordinary method (bonus annualised with wages), so you can match your employer’s practice.

Overtime is ordinary wages in every modelled country. For US filers, the 2025–2028 federal deduction for the FLSA premium portion of overtime (capped at $12,500 / $25,000 MFJ with an income phase-out) and the parallel “no tax on tips” deduction (capped at $25,000) exist — the tips deduction can be estimated with a toggle; the overtime deduction is flagged but not auto-applied because only the premium half of time-and-a-half qualifies. Neither ever reduces Social Security or Medicare tax.

Social security contributions and their caps

Most countries take a payroll contribution that funds pensions and social insurance — and most of them cap it. US Social Security stops at the $184,500 wage base (2026); Canadian CPP stops at the $74,600 YMPE with a second 4% band to $85,000; UK employee NI drops from 8% to 2% above £50,270; Australian HELP repayments switch to 10% of total income at high incomes. India’s EPF is computed on basic pay, statutorily on a ₹15,000/month ceiling that many employers voluntarily exceed.

Caps mean the marginal deduction rate FALLS at certain incomes — a high earner’s last dollar may carry no Social Security at all. Forgetting the caps is one of the main reasons flat-percentage estimates drift from reality, and it is exactly what the country modules model.

Why “extra gross ≠ extra take-home”

A 10,000 raise never adds 10,000 to your bank account. The raise lands on top of your existing income, so it is taxed entirely at your highest applicable rates — marginal income tax plus uncapped contributions. Keeping 55–75% of a raise is normal; the scenario mode computes the exact share for your inputs and shows it as “kept of extra gross”.

The reverse is also true and more cheerful: because lower bands and allowances are already used up, a pay CUT costs less net than its face value. The asymmetry is the whole reason gross-to-net modelling matters for negotiating offers and raises.

Comparing job offers on usable cash

The headline salary is the worst single number for comparing offers. A 90,000 offer in a high-tax location can net less than an 85,000 offer in a low-tax one; a different pay frequency changes the paycheck rhythm; bonus-heavy packages shift cash into one withholding-heavy payment. The offer mode computes annual and monthly net for both offers under the same model and names the one with more usable cash.

Cash is still only one axis. Employer retirement match, health insurance quality, equity, job security, growth, and commute are real compensation that no take-home calculator measures — a lower-net offer can absolutely be the better offer. The tool says which offer pays more cash; only you can decide which offer is better.

Reverse: from desired take-home to required gross

Working backwards — “I need 4,000 a month in hand; what salary do I ask for?” — has no closed-form answer in a progressive system, because the deduction rate itself depends on the answer. The textbook approximation, Required Gross = Desired Net ÷ (1 − deduction rate), is only exact while the rate stays constant.

This calculator instead bisects the full forward model: it searches for the gross salary whose computed net matches your target, honouring brackets, caps, rebates, and credits along the way. The result is labelled approximate anyway — real payroll adds rounding rules and timing effects no annual model captures.

Withholding is an estimate, not the final tax

Everything deducted from a paycheck during the year is a prepayment toward a tax bill that is only settled when the year closes — by a tax return (US, India, Canada, Australia) or by PAYE reconciliation (UK). Over-withholding becomes a refund; under-withholding becomes a balance due. Neither changes the true tax — only the timing.

That is also the honest boundary of this tool: it estimates the annual liability and divides it across paychecks. Your employer’s actual per-paycheck withholding follows official tables (Pub 15-T, CRA T4032/PDOC, ATO schedules, HMRC codes) that can differ from the annual average — usually by small amounts that wash out at year-end.

What moves take-home pay the most

In rough order of impact for most salaried people: (1) the country and region — state/province/city taxes swing net pay by 0–12% of gross; (2) income level — progressive brackets mean the effective rate climbs with salary; (3) pre-tax retirement contributions — the single biggest lever you control; (4) filing status or regime — US filing statuses and India’s new-vs-old regime choice are worth real money; (5) benefits premiums and other fixed deductions; (6) social-contribution caps at higher incomes.

The least productive thing to optimise is pay frequency — it changes the rhythm of your cash, never the amount. The most productive is usually the pre-tax contribution rate, which simultaneously builds savings and cuts the current tax bill.

When to use a payroll professional instead

Use your employer’s payroll department, official calculators, or a professional when the answer has consequences: starting a job with equity or multi-state work, variable hourly schedules, mid-year W-4 or tax-code changes, garnishment orders, visa or residency changes, or any situation where a payslip already disagrees with your expectation. This page is for planning and understanding — the authoritative numbers are on your payslip and your tax return.

Country-specific notes

Every country module is an estimate model: sourced figures for a named tax year, with an explicit included/excluded list shown next to the results. None of them replicates official payroll software.

United States (2025 / 2026)

Federal income tax uses official IRS brackets and standard deductions (shared with our income tax calculator), dependent credits with phase-outs, and W-4-style inputs including the multiple-jobs stacking. Social Security 6.2% is capped at the $184,500 wage base (2026); Medicare adds 1.45% plus 0.9% over $200,000. Bonuses can use the flat 22%/37% supplemental method. State tax is an editable flat-rate estimate — no-tax and flat-tax states are prefilled with verified 2026 rates; progressive states ask for your effective rate. Not included: exact Pub 15-T withholding tables, state brackets, SDI/PFL, AMT, EITC.

India (FY 2026-27 — unchanged from FY 2025-26)

Both regimes are modelled: the new regime’s ₹4L-step slabs, ₹75,000 standard deduction, and the §87A rebate that zeroes tax up to ₹12L taxable (with marginal relief just above), and the old regime with HRA exemption, 80C (employee EPF counts toward the ₹1.5L cap), 80D, and NPS 80CCD(1B). Employee EPF runs at 12% of basic — on the ₹15,000/month statutory ceiling or actual basic. Professional tax is prefilled by state. CTC input is supported with the employer-EPF adjustment and a clear warning that CTC ≠ gross ≠ in-hand. Surcharge tiers and 4% cess apply; surcharge marginal relief is not modelled.

United Kingdom (2026/27 and 2025/26)

PAYE with the £12,570 personal allowance and the £100k taper, England/Wales/NI bands and all six Scottish bands, employee Class 1 National Insurance (8% / 2%, annual approximation), net-pay pension contributions, student loan Plans 1/2/4/5 plus the postgraduate loan at 2026/27 thresholds, and basic tax codes (1257L-style, BR, D0, D1, NT). Not included: per-period NI on irregular pay, salary-sacrifice NI savings, benefits in kind, K codes, marriage allowance.

Canada (2026)

Federal brackets (first full year of the 14% bottom rate) with the enhanced BPA phase-down, all 13 provincial/territorial bracket sets and BPAs from CRA payroll data, CPP 5.95% + CPP2 4% with the 2026 ceilings, EI 1.63% ($68,900 MIE), the Ontario surtax, and RRSP/union-dues deductions. Quebec gets its own brackets, QPP 6.30%, QPIP 0.43%, the reduced EI rate, and the 16.5% federal abatement — with a clear warning that Revenu Québec rules differ in detail. Not included: Ontario Health Premium, CPP-enhancement deduction nuance, provincial credits beyond the BPA.

Australia (2025-26 and 2026-27)

Resident brackets including the legislated 16%→15% cut from 1 July 2026, non-resident rates from the first dollar, LITO with both tapers, the 2% Medicare levy with the low-income shade-in, HELP/HECS marginal repayments (15% over $67,000, 17% over $125,000, switching to 10% of total repayment income from $179,286 — salary sacrifice is added back), and salary sacrifice to super. Employer super (12%) is shown separately and never counted as take-home. Not included: Medicare levy surcharge, SAPTO, family thresholds, working-holiday rates.

Worked examples

1. Simple global estimate

Salary 60,000 a year, paid monthly, average income tax 15%, social contributions 7%. Income tax = 60,000 × 15% = 9,000; social = 60,000 × 7% = 4,200. Net annual = 60,000 − 13,200 = 46,8003,900 per month. The effective deduction rate is 22%, so the net-to-gross ratio is 78% — you keep 78 of every 100 earned.

2. US paycheck (2026, single, Texas, bi-weekly)

Salary $75,000. Federal: taxable = 75,000 − 16,100 standard deduction = 58,900 → 10% × 12,400 + 12% × 38,000 + 22% × 8,500 = $7,670. Social Security 6.2% = $4,650; Medicare 1.45% = $1,087.50; Texas has no state income tax. Net = 75,000 − 13,407.50 = $61,592.50 a year — $2,368.94 per bi-weekly paycheck against $2,884.62 gross, an effective deduction rate of about 17.9%.

3. India CTC → in-hand (new regime, FY 2026-27)

Monthly CTC ₹1,00,000 (₹12L a year), basic ₹40,000/month, EPF on the statutory ceiling. Employer EPF (12% × ₹1.8L) = ₹21,600 comes out of CTC first → gross ≈ ₹11,78,400. New regime: taxable = 11,78,400 − 75,000 = ₹11,03,400 ≤ ₹12L, so the §87A rebate makes income tax zero. Employee EPF ₹21,600 and Maharashtra professional tax ₹2,500 still apply → annual in-hand ≈ ₹11,54,300, about ₹96,190 per month — not ₹1,00,000, because CTC is not in-hand salary.

4. Comparing two offers

Offer A: 80,000 + 5,000 bonus where deductions run 25% → net 63,750. Offer B: 90,000, no bonus where deductions run 27% → net 65,700. Offer B wins on usable cash by 1,950 a year (162.50 a month) — far less than the 5,000 headline difference suggests. If Offer A carried a stronger retirement match or cheaper insurance, the ranking could flip; cash is only one axis.

All examples are educational estimates using the stated assumptions — real payroll outcomes depend on official rules for your jurisdiction, employer, and year.

Common mistakes

Budgeting from gross salary

Rent caps, loan eligibility, and lifestyle decisions should key off net pay. Budgeting from gross overshoots by the entire deduction rate — commonly 20–40%.

Confusing CTC with in-hand salary

An Indian CTC includes employer EPF, gratuity, and variable pay you never see monthly. A ₹12L CTC can mean roughly ₹96,000 in-hand per month, not ₹1,00,000.

Ignoring pre-tax vs post-tax

Treating a 401(k)/pension contribution as a pure cost ignores the tax saving that refunds part of it; treating a Roth contribution as tax-saving overstates today’s paycheck.

Forgetting social security caps

Above the wage base / YMPE / UEL, contribution rates drop or stop. High earners who project their January deduction rate across the year overestimate total deductions.

Assuming bonus is taxed like salary

Flat supplemental withholding (22% US federal) plus FICA can make a bonus check look over- or under-taxed versus your usual rate. The truth settles at year-end.

Comparing offers by headline salary

Location taxes, deductions, and pay frequency can flip which offer nets more. Compare annual and monthly net — then weigh benefits, match, and security separately.

Assumptions & limitations

Assumptions

  • A full year at the entered pay: annual = salary (or hourly wage × hours/week × weeks/year); per-paycheck = annual ÷ pay periods (daily 260, weekly 52, bi-weekly 26, semi-monthly 24, monthly 12, quarterly 4, semi-annual 2, annual 1).
  • Simple mode applies your average income tax rate to taxable income and your social rate to gross pay — no brackets, caps, or credits.
  • Country modes estimate the ANNUAL liability and divide it evenly across paychecks; employer per-paycheck withholding tables can differ slightly.
  • Pre-tax deductions reduce taxable income and take-home; post-tax deductions reduce take-home only. US §125 items (health/FSA/HSA) also reduce FICA wages; 401(k) does not.
  • Bonuses are annualised by default; the US flat supplemental method (22%/37%) is optional. Social contributions always include the bonus.
  • Currency in country modes follows the country (USD, INR, GBP, CAD, AUD); simple mode supports 12 currencies for display.

Limitations

  • Not payroll software: official per-period withholding tables (IRS Pub 15-T, CRA PDOC, ATO schedules, HMRC PAYE codes) are approximated by annual division.
  • US state tax is a flat-rate estimate — progressive state brackets, local rules, SDI/PFL, and credits are not computed.
  • India: surcharge marginal relief, gratuity, perquisites, LTA, and employer NPS are not modelled; the metro list uses the classic four cities.
  • UK: NI is an annual approximation; salary-sacrifice pensions, benefits in kind, and K codes are out of scope.
  • Canada: Quebec is a rougher estimate (own tax system); the Ontario Health Premium and CPP-enhancement deduction nuance are omitted.
  • Australia: Medicare levy surcharge, family thresholds, and SAPTO are not modelled; the legislated 2024-25 Medicare low-income threshold ($27,222) is used because the higher 2025-26 figure announced in the May 2026 Budget was not yet confirmed as legislated; 2026-27 HELP thresholds were not yet published and reuse 2025-26 bands.
  • Year-end refunds or balances due are not estimated here — see the income tax calculator for refund arithmetic.

This is a paycheck estimate, not a filed computation. For annual tax liability, refunds, and band-by-band detail use the income tax calculator; for consumption taxes see the VAT/GST calculator.

Frequently asked questions

What is take-home pay?

Take-home pay — also called net pay or in-hand salary — is the amount deposited in your bank account after your employer withholds income tax, social security or payroll contributions, and deductions such as retirement plans, health insurance, or garnishments. It is always lower than gross salary, typically by 20–40%.

How is take-home pay calculated?

Annual take-home = gross pay (salary or hourly wage × hours × weeks, plus bonus and overtime) − income tax − social contributions − pre-tax deductions − post-tax deductions − extra withholding. Per-paycheck take-home divides that by your pay periods: 52 weekly, 26 bi-weekly, 24 semi-monthly, 12 monthly.

Is this calculator accurate for my country?

The simple mode is as accurate as the average rates you enter, anywhere. The country modes apply sourced figures for the US (IRS 2025/2026), India (FY 2026-27), UK (2026/27), Canada (2026), and Australia (2025-26 / 2026-27) — but they are estimate models, not official payroll: each lists what it includes and excludes, and your payslip is the authority.

What is the difference between gross pay and net pay?

Gross pay is everything you earn before withholding; net pay is what remains after taxes, social contributions, and deductions. The ratio between them — the net-to-gross ratio shown by this calculator — is the single most useful number for budgeting and offer comparison.

How do pre-tax deductions change my paycheck?

A pre-tax deduction lowers taxable income, so part of the contribution comes back immediately as tax savings: 100 contributed at a 30% marginal rate cuts your paycheck by roughly 70. Post-tax deductions cost their full face value. Both reduce take-home; only pre-tax reduces the tax.

Why does my bonus seem taxed more heavily?

Most US employers withhold a flat 22% federal tax on separate bonus checks (37% above $1M) plus Social Security and Medicare; other countries effectively tax bonuses at your top marginal rates because they stack on existing income. The year-end return reconciles any over- or under-withholding — bonuses are not permanently taxed at a special rate.

What is the difference between bi-weekly and semi-monthly pay?

Bi-weekly means 26 paychecks (every two weeks); semi-monthly means 24 (twice a month). At the same salary, each bi-weekly check is smaller (annual ÷ 26 vs ÷ 24), but two months a year contain three bi-weekly paydays. The annual total is identical either way.

What is CTC and why is my in-hand salary so much lower?

CTC (cost to company) bundles your gross salary with employer EPF, gratuity provisions, insurance, and variable pay. From CTC to in-hand you lose the employer-side components first (they were never your monthly cash), then income tax, employee EPF (12% of basic), and professional tax. A ₹12L CTC commonly yields ₹95,000–97,000 in-hand per month under the new regime.

Does the calculator include employer costs like super or employer FICA?

Optionally, and always separately. The employer-cost card shows gross plus employer Social Security/Medicare (US), employer NI (UK), employer CPP/EI (Canada), employer EPF (India), or the 12% super guarantee (Australia) — but those amounts are never mixed into your take-home, because they are not your cash.

How accurate is the reverse net-to-gross calculation?

It bisects the full forward model, so brackets, caps, and rebates are honoured — much better than the ÷(1−rate) shortcut. It is still approximate: payroll rounding, timing, and rules outside the model can shift the real requirement by a small margin. Treat the result as a negotiation anchor, not a contract number.

Can I model a raise or a bigger 401(k) contribution?

Yes — that is what the Scenarios mode is for. Three editable columns (base, scenario 2, scenario 3) accept different salaries, rates, deductions, bonus, and frequency, and report the net difference, the monthly difference, and the share of each extra unit of gross you actually keep.

Why is my actual paycheck slightly different from this estimate?

Employers compute withholding per pay period using official tables and your exact elections, while this tool estimates the annual liability and divides it evenly. Mid-year raises, benefit changes, retroactive adjustments, and rounding all create small gaps that normally settle at year-end reconciliation.

Is my data stored anywhere?

No. Every calculation and the Excel export run entirely in your browser — nothing you type is sent to a server, stored, or shared.

Does this calculator file or pay my taxes?

No. It is an educational planning tool. It does not file returns, run payroll, or guarantee any figure. For filings and binding numbers use official tax-authority tools, your employer payroll team, or a qualified professional.

Related calculators

Tools that build on the same income and tax math:

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Sources & methodology

Methodology: the simple mode applies your average rates to the gross-to-net identity (net + deductions = gross, verified on every calculation). Country modes pin every built-in figure — brackets, standard deductions and allowances, contribution rates and caps, rebates, levy thresholds — to a named tax year from the official releases below, then estimate the annual liability and divide it across pay periods. US federal figures are imported from the same IRS-sourced dataset as our income tax calculator, so the two can never disagree. The engine and the Excel workbook are validated against hand-computed cases and an Excel-compatible formula engine on every change. Sources verified June 2026; links open in a new tab.

Last reviewed: 14 June 2026. Formula and assumptions reviewed for accuracy. First published 11 June 2026.

Tax & payroll disclaimer

This calculator is for educational estimates only. It is not payroll, tax, legal, accounting, or financial advice. Actual take-home pay may differ because of employer payroll settings, tax authority updates, exemptions, credits, benefits, local rules, and year-end reconciliation. Verify with official sources, employer payroll, or a qualified professional.

Built and maintained by Calculator Matters, an independent calculator project. Country figures verified against the official releases above; gross-to-net identities validated on every calculation · Last reviewed 14 June 2026 · How we calculate · Found an error? [email protected]

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