New Hampshire Paycheck Calculator — Federal + FICA Only

By the Taxestool Editorial Team Last reviewed Editorial standards

Estimate your New Hampshire take-home pay. No state income tax on wages — and as of 2025, no tax on interest or dividends either. 2026 federal + FICA only.

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

Tax year 2026. New Hampshire.

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
    New Hampshire 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

    New Hampshire paycheck quick facts

    NH state income tax (wages)0% (never taxed)
    Interest & Dividends taxFully repealed for 2025+
    Statewide sales tax0% (meals & rooms 8.5%)
    Effective property tax~1.9% (among the highest in the US)
    Federal income tax10% – 37% (2026 brackets)
    FICA6.2% SS (cap $183,600) + 1.45% Medicare

    How your New Hampshire paycheck works

    New Hampshire has never taxed wage income — the legendary "Live Free or Die" state has long relied on property and business taxes instead. As of tax year 2025, the last remnant of state income tax — a 5% levy on interest and dividends — was fully phased out, making New Hampshire one of the truly zero-income-tax states.

    The trade-off is property tax: at roughly 1.9% effective rate, New Hampshire homeowners pay among the highest property tax bills in the country. For renters and remote workers earning out-of-state income, the math is often very favorable. For people working in Massachusetts but living in NH, MA tax still applies to those wages — verify your paycheck shows the correct state.

    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 New Hampshire take-home pay

    • Max your 401(k). Without state tax to reclaim anything, all the leverage is at the federal bracket — but it's still substantial.
    • Open an HSA if eligible. The triple-tax advantage is especially valuable now that NH takes nothing on the contributions or growth either.
    • Cross-border workers: if you commute to MA, your wages there are MA-taxable. Confirm your W-4 / M-4 setup matches your actual work location.
    • Section-125 plan for medical, dental, vision, dependent care — all pre-tax for federal and FICA.

    Compare with other zero-income-tax states: Florida, Texas, Tennessee.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does New Hampshire have a state income tax?
    Not on wages. New Hampshire historically taxed only interest and dividends (the "I&D tax") at 5%. That tax was phased down 1% per year starting 2023 and is fully repealed for tax years 2025 onward. Wage income has never been taxed.
    Is there a sales tax in New Hampshire?
    No statewide sales tax. New Hampshire is famously a "tax-free shopping" destination from neighboring Massachusetts and Maine — though some specific transactions (meals & rooms 8.5%, certain utilities) are taxed.
    How does New Hampshire fund itself without sales or income tax?
    Primarily through high property taxes (one of the highest effective rates in the US, around 1.9%), a business profits tax, and the meals & rooms tax. Property tax is the main lever — much higher than the national average.
    What federal taxes apply to my New Hampshire salary in 2026?
    Standard 2026 IRS brackets: 10% / 12% / 22% / 24% / 32% / 35% / 37%, applied after the $15,750 (single) or $31,500 (MFJ) standard deduction. FICA adds 6.2% Social Security (capped at $183,600 of wages) and 1.45% Medicare.
    What if I work in Massachusetts but live in New Hampshire?
    You owe Massachusetts state income tax on wages earned while working in MA, even though New Hampshire takes none. A long-running NH–MA cross-border dispute was settled by the Supreme Court in 2021 in favor of MA. Your paycheck will show MA withholding from a Massachusetts employer.
    When did New Hampshire fully eliminate income tax?
    For tax year 2025. The Interest & Dividends tax phased down from 5% (2022) to 4% (2023), 3% (2024), and 0% from 2025 onward. New Hampshire now has zero state tax on any form of income — wages or investment.
    How can I increase my New Hampshire take-home pay?
    Pre-tax accounts are the main lever: 401(k), HSA (best tax efficiency — skips both income tax and FICA), FSA, and pre-tax health premiums via a Section-125 cafeteria plan.

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