New York Paycheck Calculator 2026

Estimate your New York take-home pay using updated 2026 federal withholding rules, current FICA figures, and the state tax settings used by this calculator.

State Tax

Up to 10.9%

Min Wage

$16.50/hr

Avg Salary

$72,800

Cost of Living

139.1

2026 W-4 and New York Paycheck Rules

New York State Tax Snapshot
  • New York uses graduated state income tax brackets with a top marginal rate of 10.9%.
  • Minimum wage: $16.50/hr
  • Average salary: $72,800
  • Median salary: $65,200
  • Cost of living index: 139.1
  • NYC residents pay additional city tax (3.078% - 3.876%)
2026 Form W-4 Steps
  • Step 2(b) increases withholding when there are multiple jobs.
  • Step 3 uses $2,200 per qualifying child under 17 and $500 per other dependent.
  • Step 4(a) adds annual other income into federal withholding.
  • Step 4(b) uses annual deduction worksheet numbers, not per-paycheck figures.
  • Step 4(c) adds an extra flat-dollar withholding amount to each paycheck.
2026 Federal Payroll Taxes
  • Social Security: 6.20% up to $184,500
  • Medicare: 1.45% on all wages
  • Additional Medicare: 0.90% above $200K single / $250K married filing jointly
  • Federal standard deduction: $16,100 single / $32,200 married filing jointly / $24,150 head of household
Deductions That Change Take-Home Pay
  • Traditional 401(k) contributions reduce federal taxable income, but they are still generally subject to FICA.
  • Health insurance premiums, HSA contributions, and FSA contributions usually reduce both income-tax wages and FICA wages.
  • Roth 401(k) contributions are post-tax, so they lower take-home pay without lowering current federal withholding.
  • Local taxes are not included in the calculator, so city or county payroll taxes may reduce actual net pay further.

Major Employment Areas in New York

New York City

NY

Buffalo

NY

Rochester

NY

Albany

NY

Syracuse

NY

FAQ

New York Paycheck Calculator FAQ

Everything you need to know about paychecks, taxes, and take-home pay in New York

The federal Form W-4 controls how much federal income tax your employer withholds from each paycheck in New York. In 2026, the most important entries are Step 2(b) for multiple jobs or a working spouse, Step 3 for dependent credits, Step 4(a) for other income, Step 4(b) for deductions, and Step 4(c) for any extra flat-dollar withholding. Your New York paycheck may also include state tax if your state taxes wages, but the W-4 itself is still the federal withholding form.
New York uses graduated state income tax brackets with a top marginal rate of 10.9%. NYC residents pay additional city tax (3.078% - 3.876%)
Employees in New York still pay the same federal payroll taxes as workers in every other state: Social Security tax of 6.2% on wages up to $184,500, plus Medicare tax of 1.45% on all wages. Additional Medicare tax of 0.9% applies above $200,000 for single filers, $250,000 for married filing jointly, $125,000 for married filing separately, and $200,000 for head of household filers.
Step 2(b) increases federal withholding when there are multiple jobs, which usually reduces take-home pay now but helps avoid an underpayment later. Step 3 reduces federal withholding through dependent amounts, and this calculator uses $2,200 for each qualifying child under 17 and $500 for each other dependent. Step 4(a) adds other annual income into withholding calculations, Step 4(b) reduces taxable income using annual deduction worksheet amounts, and Step 4(c) adds an extra flat amount of withholding to each paycheck.
Traditional 401(k) contributions reduce federal taxable income, but they are still generally subject to Social Security and Medicare tax. Section 125 health insurance premiums, HSA contributions, and FSA contributions usually reduce both income-tax wages and FICA wages. Roth 401(k) contributions do not reduce current taxable income, so they lower take-home pay without lowering current federal withholding.
This calculator covers federal withholding, FICA, and state income tax rules used by the calculator engine, but it does not add city, county, or school district payroll taxes. If you work in a location with local wage taxes, your actual take-home pay may be lower than this estimate. NYC residents pay additional city tax (3.078% - 3.876%)
New York's minimum wage is $16.50/hr, which is about $34,320 per year before taxes for full-time work. The average salary is $72,800, the median salary is $65,200, and the cost-of-living index is 139.1.

New York Tax Summary

  • State Tax: Up to 10.9%
  • Federal withholding: Form W-4 based
  • Social Security: 6.20%
  • Medicare: 1.45%

2026 W-4 Checklist

  • Step 2(b): Multiple jobs / spouse works
  • Step 3: $2,200 child / $500 other
  • Step 4(a): Annual other income
  • Step 4(b)/(c): Annual deductions and extra withholding

New York Pay Snapshot

  • Average salary: $72,800
  • Median salary: $65,200
  • Minimum wage: $16.50/hr
  • Cost of living: 139.1

Major Cities

  • New York City
  • Buffalo
  • Rochester
  • Albany
  • Syracuse