Florida Paycheck Calculator — Take-Home Pay After Federal & FICA

By the Taxestool Editorial Team Last reviewed Editorial standards

Estimate your Florida take-home pay in seconds. 2026 federal income tax + FICA (Social Security & Medicare). No state income tax. Salary or hourly, any pay frequency.

$
Pre-tax deductions (annual)
$
$
$
$
Additional withholdings & post-tax
$
$

Tax year 2026. Florida.

Take-home per paycheck

$0

Annual take-home

$0

Effective tax

0%

Marginal rate

0%

🚀 What's next?

Your numbers carry forward — no re-typing.

Where each $1 of your pay goes

    Where is your money going?

    Line Annual Per period
    Gross pay $0 $0
    Pre-tax deductions −$0 −$0
    Federal income tax −$0 −$0
    Social Security (6.2%) −$0 −$0
    Medicare (1.45%) −$0 −$0
    Additional Medicare (0.9%) −$0 −$0
    Florida state tax $0 $0
    State disability (SDI) $0 $0
    State unemployment (SUI) $0 $0
    Local / city tax $0 $0
    Post-tax deductions −$0 −$0
    Take-home pay $0 $0

    Florida paycheck quick facts

    Florida state income tax0%
    Local (city / county) income tax0%
    Federal income tax10% – 37% (progressive)
    Social Security tax6.2% on first $183,600 (2026)
    Medicare tax1.45% (all wages) + 0.9% above $200k single / $250k MFJ
    Standard deduction (2026)$15,750 single · $31,500 MFJ · $23,625 HoH

    How your Florida paycheck works

    Florida is one of nine US states with no state income tax, which makes it a popular destination for retirees, remote workers and high earners moving from higher-tax states. That doesn't mean your paycheck is tax-free — your employer still withholds federal income tax and FICA (Social Security and Medicare) from every paycheck.

    The IRS uses a progressive bracket system: the first dollars you earn are taxed at 10%, the next at 12%, and so on up to 37% for incomes above $640,600 (single) or $768,700 (married filing jointly) in 2026. Your marginal rate is the bracket your last dollar falls into; your effective rate is your total tax divided by gross — almost always lower than your marginal rate.

    FICA: Social Security and Medicare

    Every W-2 employee in the US pays FICA, regardless of state. It has two parts:

    • Social Security — 6.2% of wages up to the annual wage base ($183,600 for 2026). Earnings above the cap are not taxed for Social Security.
    • Medicare — 1.45% of all wages with no cap. If you earn above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (married filing jointly), an additional 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax applies to the portion above that threshold.

    Your employer pays a matching 6.2% + 1.45% (the Additional Medicare is employee-only). Self-employed workers pay both halves — known as SECA: 12.4% Social Security + 2.9% Medicare.

    Federal income tax brackets (2026)

    The IRS uses a progressive bracket system. The first dollars you earn are taxed at 10%, the next at 12%, and so on up to 37% for high earners. Your marginal rate is the bracket your last dollar falls into; your effective rate is your total tax divided by gross — almost always lower than your marginal rate.

    Single / MFSMFJRate
    $0 – $12,150$0 – $24,30010%
    $12,150 – $49,450$24,300 – $98,90012%
    $49,450 – $105,700$98,900 – $211,40022%
    $105,700 – $201,775$211,400 – $403,55024%
    $201,775 – $256,225$403,550 – $512,45032%
    $256,225 – $640,600$512,450 – $768,70035%
    $640,600+$768,700+37%

    The 2026 standard deduction reduces taxable income before brackets apply: $15,750 single, $31,500 married filing jointly, $23,625 head of household.

    Pre-tax deductions that reduce your taxable income

    The biggest lever you control on your paycheck is your pre-tax contributions. These come out of your gross pay before federal income tax is calculated, so every dollar contributed saves you your marginal rate's worth of tax.

    • Traditional 401(k) — up to $24,500 for 2026 ($31,000 if 50+). Reduces federal taxable income but not FICA wages.
    • HSA (Health Savings Account) — up to $4,400 single / $8,750 family in 2026, only available with a high-deductible health plan. Triple-tax-advantaged: pre-tax going in, tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals for medical expenses.
    • FSA (Flexible Spending Account) — up to $3,400 for 2026. Use-it-or-lose-it (with limited rollover). Pre-tax for both federal income tax and FICA.
    • Employer health, dental, and vision premiums — typically pre-tax via a Section 125 cafeteria plan.

    How to use this calculator

    1. Pick Salary or Hourly.
    2. Enter your annual salary (or wage + hours per period).
    3. Choose your pay frequency — most US employers pay bi-weekly (26 paychecks/year) or semi-monthly (24 paychecks/year).
    4. Pick your filing status. It controls the brackets and standard deduction.
    5. If you have qualifying children under 17, enter the count to claim the Child Tax Credit (up to $2,000 per child).
    6. Expand Pre-tax deductions if you contribute to 401(k), HSA, FSA, or pay health premiums pre-tax.

    The result updates instantly. The "Take-home per paycheck" figure is what should hit your bank account; the breakdown table shows exactly where the rest goes.

    Sources

    The federal tax constants used here come directly from the 2026 authoritative sources:

    Calculator is provided for estimation only and does not constitute tax advice. For tax filing, consult the IRS forms above or a licensed tax professional.

    How to increase your Florida take-home pay

    Florida already saves you the 4–13% that other states would take in income tax, but there are still levers:

    • Max out your 401(k). Every dollar contributed at a 22% bracket saves $0.22 in federal tax.
    • Contribute to an HSA if you have a high-deductible health plan. Beats 401(k) for tax efficiency because there's no FICA either.
    • Update your W-4 after major life changes (marriage, new child, second job) so you're not over- or under-withholding.
    • Adjust your withholding if you consistently get a big refund — you're giving the IRS an interest-free loan. Increase deductions on W-4 Step 4(b) or reduce extra withholding on 4(c).

    Need to compare against another state? More state paycheck calculators are on the way.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Florida have a state income tax?
    No. Florida is one of nine US states with no state income tax on wages. Florida also has no local (city or county) income tax. The only taxes that come out of your paycheck are federal income tax and FICA (Social Security + Medicare).
    What are the federal income tax brackets for 2026?
    For tax year 2026 (single filer): 10% up to $12,150, 12% to $49,450, 22% to $105,700, 24% to $201,775, 32% to $256,225, 35% to $640,600, and 37% above that. Married-filing-jointly brackets are roughly double the single thresholds.
    How much is FICA tax?
    FICA is 7.65% of your wages — 6.2% Social Security (on the first $183,600 of 2026 wages) plus 1.45% Medicare (uncapped). Your employer matches both. Earners above $200,000 (single) or $250,000 (MFJ) also pay an extra 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax, which is not matched by the employer.
    What is the 2026 standard deduction?
    For tax year 2026: $15,750 single, $31,500 married filing jointly, $15,750 married filing separately, and $23,625 head of household. The standard deduction is subtracted from your gross income before federal tax is calculated.
    How do pre-tax 401(k) contributions affect my paycheck?
    Traditional 401(k) contributions are subtracted from your gross wages before federal income tax is calculated — so a $20,000 contribution saves a 22%-bracket worker $4,400 in federal tax. However, 401(k) contributions are not exempt from Social Security or Medicare tax, so FICA is still calculated on the full gross.
    Why is my paycheck smaller than my salary ÷ pay periods?
    Your gross paycheck equals salary ÷ pay periods, but net (take-home) pay is what lands in your bank account after federal income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and any pre-tax deductions (401(k), health insurance, HSA, FSA) are withheld. In Florida, that usually means losing 15–25% of gross for someone earning a typical salary.
    How does the new W-4 form affect my withholding?
    The W-4 was redesigned in 2020 to remove the old "allowances" system. Instead, you enter dollar amounts: dependents on Step 3, other income on Step 4(a), expected deductions on Step 4(b), and any extra withholding you want on Step 4(c). Our calculator approximates the W-4 algorithm — for the most accurate annual estimate, use the figures from your most recent tax return.
    Is this calculator accurate?
    It is built from the published 2026 IRS brackets, the SSA wage base, and current Medicare thresholds, and gives a close estimate of your take-home pay. It does not handle every edge case (multiple jobs, large investment income, itemized deductions, AMT). For tax filing, always use the official IRS forms or a licensed preparer.

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