Updated for 2026

Net Pay Calculator

Start from your gross pay for a single pay period and see your real take-home amount — including pre-tax 401(k) and health insurance deductions.

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Estimate only — not tax advice.
Net pay this period
$0.00
Enter your details and calculate
Gross pay$0.00
Pre-tax deductions$0.00
Federal income tax$0.00
Social Security (6.2%)$0.00
Medicare (1.45%)$0.00
Net pay$0.00
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Why pre-tax deductions matter

Contributions to a traditional 401(k), HSA, or pre-tax health insurance premium are subtracted from your gross pay before federal and state income tax is calculated. This lowers your taxable income — and therefore your tax bill — even though the money still comes out of your paycheck. (Note: pre-tax deductions don't reduce Social Security or Medicare wages in most cases; this calculator applies them to federal and state income tax only, which is the most common setup.)

Frequently asked questions

Net pay is your take-home pay — the amount deposited into your bank account after federal tax, state tax, Social Security, Medicare, and any pre-tax deductions are subtracted from your gross pay.
Contributions to a traditional 401(k), HSA, or pre-tax health insurance premium are subtracted from your gross pay before federal and state income tax is calculated — lowering your taxable income and therefore your tax bill, even though the money still comes out of your paycheck.
This calculator starts from your gross pay for a single pay period (not your annual salary), which is useful if your pay varies due to overtime or bonuses. For a calculator based on annual salary instead, try our Paycheck Calculator.

Traditional vs. Roth 401(k): why it matters here

This calculator's pre-tax deduction field assumes a traditional 401(k), where contributions are subtracted from your taxable income before federal and state tax is calculated — lowering your tax bill today in exchange for paying tax on withdrawals in retirement. A Roth 401(k) works the opposite way: contributions come out of your paycheck after tax, so they don't reduce your taxable income now, but qualified withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. If your contributions are Roth rather than traditional, leave the pre-tax fields at zero and your net pay estimate will be more accurate, since Roth contributions don't lower this period's tax withholding.

Other common pre-tax deductions not modeled here

Beyond 401(k) and health insurance, many employees also have pre-tax deductions for dental and vision insurance, a Flexible Spending Account (FSA), a Health Savings Account (HSA), or commuter benefits. Any of these reduce your taxable income similarly to the fields already in this calculator. If you have several pre-tax benefits, you can approximate their combined effect by adding their per-period dollar amounts together into the "Health insurance / period" field, since both are treated the same way in the underlying calculation.

More frequently asked questions

Not directly as a separate field — post-tax deductions reduce your final net pay but don't affect the tax calculation itself. You can manually subtract any known post-tax deduction amounts from the net pay figure this calculator shows for a more accurate final number.
Because pre-tax 401(k) contributions reduce your taxable income, part of each dollar contributed would have gone to taxes anyway. So while your paycheck does go down, it goes down by less than the full contribution amount — the difference is the tax you would have otherwise paid on that money.

A quick sanity check for your result

As a rough rule of thumb, most W-2 employees in no-tax states see net pay around 75–82% of gross pay, while those in higher-tax states with meaningful pre-tax deductions often land closer to 68–75%. If your result falls far outside that range, double-check your inputs — a misplaced decimal in the 401(k) percentage field is a common source of unexpectedly large swings in the estimate.

Related calculators

This calculator provides estimates for general informational purposes only and is not tax or legal advice. Consult a licensed CPA or your HR/benefits team for your exact deduction setup.