Florida Paycheck Calculator

Estimate your Florida take-home pay. Florida has no state income tax, so your paycheck only loses federal tax and FICA — keeping more of every dollar than in most states.

Tax year 2026 Updated May 2026

How to use this calculator

  1. Type your gross pay per paycheck — what you earn before any tax or deduction comes out.
  2. Pick your pay frequency (biweekly is the default — it's the most common).
  3. Set your federal filing status (Single or Married Filing Jointly).
  4. If you contribute to a traditional 401(k), enter the percentage. Add any pre-tax health or HSA deductions per paycheck.
  5. The result updates as you go. Use Share link to send your numbers to someone else without retyping them.

A real example: a $60,000 salary in Florida

Say you take a $60,000-a-year job in Tampa, paid every two weeks, single, no 401(k). That's $2,307.69 gross per paycheck. The math goes like this for the year:

LineAmount
Gross pay$60,000.00
Federal income tax (after the $16,100 standard deduction)−$5,020.00
Social Security (6.2% up to $184,500)−$3,720.00
Medicare (1.45%)−$870.00
Florida state income tax$0.00
Take-home for the year$50,390.00
Take-home per biweekly check$1,938.08

About 16% of your gross goes to federal taxes and FICA. The same $60k salary in California would lose another roughly $2,420 to state income tax and SDI — that's the no-state-tax advantage in real dollars, and it's why Florida is one of the most tax-friendly states for W-2 earners.

Now add a 5% traditional 401(k) and $200/month in pre-tax health premiums on a $120,000 salary, married, paid monthly: gross $10,000/mo, $500 to the 401(k), $200 to health. Federal tax for the year drops to about $9,032 (both pre-tax items reduce it), FICA runs about $8,996 (the 401(k) is still FICA-taxed, but the health premium isn't), and you take home roughly $7,798 a month.

How a Florida paycheck is calculated

Because Florida has no state income tax, the formula is shorter than most states:

Annual gross = gross per period × periods per year Federal tax = brackets( gross − 401(k) − pre-tax − $16,100 std deduction ) Social Security= 6.2% × min(gross − pre-tax, $184,500) Medicare = 1.45% × (gross − pre-tax) + 0.9% over $200,000 Florida tax = $0 Net per period = (gross − 401(k) − pre-tax − federal − FICA) ÷ periods

A few details worth knowing:

  • 401(k) and pre-tax aren't the same to the IRS. Traditional 401(k) lowers federal income tax but NOT FICA. Section 125 items (health insurance, HSA, FSA) lower both.
  • Federal brackets are marginal. A higher bracket only applies to the dollars above the threshold, not the whole salary — earning your way into the 22% bracket doesn't tax your whole income at 22%.
  • The Social Security cap is real. Once your wages cross $184,500 in 2026, no more Social Security tax until next year. Medicare keeps going on every dollar.

What Florida paychecks look like at common salaries (single, no 401k)

Annual salaryFederal taxFICANet per yearNet per biweekly check
$40,000$2,620.00$3,060.00$34,320.00$1,320.00
$50,000$3,820.00$3,825.00$42,355.00$1,629.04
$60,000$5,020.00$4,590.00$50,390.00$1,938.08
$75,000$7,670.00$5,737.50$61,592.50$2,368.94
$100,000$13,170.00$7,650.00$79,180.00$3,045.38
$150,000$24,734.00$11,475.00$113,791.00$4,376.58

Numbers above are estimates with the 2026 standard deduction, single filer, no 401(k) or pre-tax deductions. Your actual withholding will differ based on your W-4.

Tips to take home more

  • Max out pre-tax benefits first. Health insurance, HSA, and FSA dollars reduce both your federal tax and FICA — that's a roughly 22–28% discount on those expenses for most people.
  • A 401(k) is real money, not a deduction. A 5% contribution on $60k is $3,000 the IRS doesn't see right now. You're not losing it — you're moving it.
  • Check your W-4 if your refund or bill is large. A big refund means you overpaid all year; a big bill means you underpaid. Either way, the IRS withholding estimator at irs.gov/W4App helps fix it.
  • Track the Social Security cap. If you'll cross $184,500 this year, your last few checks will be noticeably bigger — useful to know if you're planning big purchases.

Frequently asked questions

Does Florida have a state income tax?

No. Florida doesn't tax wage income — it's one of nine states with no state income tax. Florida also has no state-level payroll tax for employees, so your paycheck is reduced only by federal income tax and FICA (Social Security and Medicare).

How much of a $60,000 salary do you take home in Florida?

A single filer earning $60,000 in Florida with no pre-tax deductions takes home roughly $50,390 a year, or about $1,938 every two weeks. Federal income tax runs about $5,020 and FICA about $4,590. There's no state line on a Florida paycheck.

How does Social Security tax work on a Florida paycheck?

Social Security is 6.2% of your wages, up to the 2026 wage base of $184,500. Earnings above that aren't subject to Social Security tax. Medicare is 1.45% of every dollar with no cap, plus another 0.9% on wages over $200,000.

Will a 401(k) increase my take-home pay in Florida?

A traditional 401(k) lowers your federal income tax, so your check shrinks by less than the contribution. It still counts as wages for Social Security and Medicare, so FICA stays the same. The contribution itself comes out of your check, so your net is lower — but more of your money stays yours, just in the retirement account instead of the IRS.

Does this calculator match what my employer withholds?

It gives a close estimate, not an exact match. Employers withhold using IRS Publication 15-T and the full details on your Form W-4 — extra withholding, multiple jobs, dependents, credits. This tool models the standard deduction with a single or married filing status, which is what most people end up close to at tax time.

Estimate only — not tax or financial advice. These numbers are estimates based on 2026 federal tax brackets, the standard deduction, and 2026 FICA rates. They aren't exact employer withholding (which follows IRS Publication 15-T and your full Form W-4) and don't account for credits, dependents, multiple jobs, garnishments, or post-tax deductions. For decisions that affect your money, talk to a qualified tax professional or your payroll department.