Updated for 2026

New York Paycheck Calculator

Estimate your New York take-home pay — federal tax, NY state income tax, Paid Family Leave, Social Security, and Medicare all included.

$
Estimate only — not tax advice.
Take-home pay / biweekly
$0.00
Enter your details and calculate
Gross pay$0.00
Federal income tax$0.00
Social Security (6.2%)$0.00
Medicare (1.45%)$0.00
New York state tax$0.00
NY PFL$0.00
Net pay$0.00
Ad slot — in-content (responsive)

New York payroll tax overview

New York State applies a progressive income tax with rates from 4% to 9.65%. On top of state tax, employees also have Paid Family Leave (PFL) withheld — a small deduction that funds paid leave benefits.

Important: if you live or work in New York City (or Yonkers), you owe an additional local income tax on top of state tax — this calculator shows New York State tax only and does not include the NYC or Yonkers local tax add-on.

Worked example

A single filer earning $75,000/year in New York State (excluding NYC local tax), paid biweekly:

ItemPer paycheckAnnual
Gross pay$2,884.62$75,000.00
Federal income tax≈ $313.00≈ $8,140.00
Social Security$178.85$4,650.00
Medicare$41.83$1,087.50
NY state tax≈ $145.00≈ $3,770.00
NY PFL$13.13$341.25
Net pay≈ $2,192.81≈ $57,011.25

Local income context: how New York compares

According to the most recent U.S. Census Bureau American Community Survey, New York's median household income is $85,820 — above the 2024 national median of $81,604. New York City's finance, media, and corporate headquarters economy drives this figure dramatically upward compared to much of upstate New York, where incomes in cities like Buffalo, Rochester, and Syracuse run considerably closer to — or below — the national median, reflecting one of the largest urban-rural income gaps of any state.

Median household income reflects a full household (often two earners), while the calculator above estimates take-home pay for a single individual's salary — so it's a useful benchmark for context rather than a direct comparison, but it helps illustrate how a given salary stacks up against typical earnings in New York.

Frequently asked questions

New York uses a progressive income tax with rates from 4% to 9.65% at the state level, depending on income and filing status.
Yes. NYC (and Yonkers) residents owe an additional local income tax on top of state tax — typically an extra 3% to 3.9% in NYC depending on income. This calculator shows New York State tax only, not the NYC add-on.
New York Paid Family Leave (PFL) is a small payroll deduction that funds paid leave for employees caring for a new child or a seriously ill family member.

Understanding the NYC local tax add-on

If you live in New York City, your total income tax burden is higher than what this calculator shows, since NYC residents pay both New York State tax and an additional NYC resident tax — generally adding another 3% to 3.9% depending on income. This city-level tax applies based on residency, not where you work, so a Manhattan worker who lives in New Jersey wouldn't owe NYC tax, while a Brooklyn resident working remotely for an out-of-state company still would. Yonkers has a similar, smaller local tax for its residents.

New York's progressive brackets at a glance

New York State's income tax brackets are notably granular compared to many states, with rates stepping up gradually from 4% to 9.65% across several income thresholds (with even higher rates at very high income levels not modeled in this simplified calculator). This means your effective state tax rate increases gradually as your income grows, rather than jumping sharply at any single point — similar in structure to the federal system, just with New York's own thresholds.

More frequently asked questions

No — the NYC resident tax applies based on where you live, not where you work. Commuters into NYC from elsewhere in New York State or from New Jersey/Connecticut owe New York State tax (if applicable) but not the NYC add-on.
Both fund paid family leave benefits, but they're separate state programs with different rates and rules. New York's PFL rate is typically smaller than California's combined SDI/PFL deduction.

Upstate vs. downstate differences

New York State tax rates and brackets apply uniformly statewide, but the practical impact of those rates varies enormously between high-cost downstate regions (NYC, Westchester, Long Island) and lower-cost upstate areas (Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse). The same take-home pay this calculator estimates stretches very differently depending on where in the state you live — worth factoring in alongside the tax math itself.

Related calculators

This calculator provides estimates for general informational purposes only and is not tax, legal, or financial advice. It does not include NYC/Yonkers local tax. Consult a licensed CPA or tax professional for guidance specific to you.