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US Take-Home Pay Guide: What Actually Leaves Your Paycheck

Your salary offer says $80,000. Your first paycheck feels much smaller. This guide explains every line on that paycheck β€” federal withholding, Social Security, Medicare, state tax, and pre-tax benefit deductions β€” so you know exactly where your money goes and how to get more of it home.

The Anatomy of a US Paycheck

  • Gross Pay: Your salary or hourly pay before anything is removed.
  • Federal Income Tax Withholding: Based on your W-4 form and the IRS withholding tables. Adjusting your W-4 changes this amount.
  • Social Security Tax: 6.2% of wages up to $176,100 (2025). Stops at the cap β€” a meaningful benefit for high earners.
  • Medicare Tax: 1.45% with no cap. Plus 0.9% on wages over $200,000 (single).
  • State Income Tax: Varies by state. Zero in Florida, Texas, etc. Up to 13.3% in California.
  • Pre-Tax Deductions: 401(k), HSA, FSA, medical/dental premiums β€” these reduce taxable income before federal and state tax is calculated.
  • Post-Tax Deductions: Roth 401(k), some life insurance, garnishments β€” deducted after tax.

Pre-Tax Benefits: The Biggest Lever

Contributing to pre-tax accounts reduces your taxable income before federal and most state taxes are calculated:

  • 401(k): Max $23,500 in 2025 ($31,000 if age 50+). Reduces federal and most state taxable income. No FICA savings.
  • HSA (Health Savings Account): $4,300 single / $8,550 family (2025). Reduces federal income tax AND FICA β€” one of the most tax-efficient accounts available.
  • FSA (Flexible Spending Account): Up to $3,300. Use-it-or-lose-it but reduces FICA too.
  • Employer health insurance premium (employee share): Usually pre-tax, reducing FICA and income tax.

Example 1 β€” $60,000 Salary, Single, No State Income Tax

Gross Salary$60,000
401(k) contribution (6%)βˆ’$3,600
Federal Taxable Income$56,400
Standard Deductionβˆ’$15,750
Federal Income Tax (~10/12/22%)βˆ’$5,720
Social Security (6.2%)βˆ’$3,720
Medicare (1.45%)βˆ’$870
State Tax (Florida: $0)$0
Annual Take-Home~$46,090
Monthly~$3,841/mo

Example 2 β€” $100,000 Salary, Single, California

Gross$100,000
Federal Tax (~$14,070)βˆ’$14,070
Social Security (6.2%)βˆ’$6,200
Medicare (1.45%)βˆ’$1,450
CA State Tax (~9.3% bracket, effective ~6.5%)βˆ’$6,500
CA SDI (0.9%)βˆ’$900
Annual Take-Home~$70,880
Monthly~$5,907/mo

The same $100K salary in Texas (no state income tax) takes home ~$77,380/yr β€” a $6,500 difference.

How to Increase Your Take-Home Pay

  • Max your HSA first: It's the only account that avoids federal income tax, FICA, AND grows tax-free for medical expenses. A triple tax benefit.
  • Adjust your W-4: If you got a large refund last year, you're loaning the government money interest-free. Adjusting your W-4 gives you more per paycheck.
  • Consider living in a no-income-tax state: If your employer allows remote work, Texas vs California is a $6,500–$20,000+/yr difference on a $100K–$300K salary.
  • Defer income: 401(k) contributions reduce current-year taxable income. If you're in the 22% bracket, every $1,000 contributed saves $220 in federal tax.

Calculate your US take-home pay

Open Take-Home Calculator β†’
Why is my federal withholding different from my actual tax?
Your employer estimates your annual tax and withholds accordingly based on your W-4. When you file your return, you reconcile β€” if they withheld too much, you get a refund. Too little, you owe. A W-4 with the right number of allowances / additional withholding settings minimises the difference.
Does my 401(k) contribution reduce FICA taxes?
Traditional 401(k) contributions reduce federal and state income tax, but NOT FICA (Social Security + Medicare). HSA contributions made via payroll deduction do reduce FICA. This is why maxing your HSA before your 401(k) is generally recommended if you're eligible.

Source: IRS Publication 15-T, 2025. State rates approximate. Not tax advice.