New York Paycheck Calculator — 2026 Take-Home Pay with State, NYC & Yonkers Taxes
New York has the most complex paycheck calculation of any major US state — and the highest combined state and city income tax in the country for most income levels. A worker in Manhattan earning $100,000 faces federal income tax, New York State income tax (up to 10.9%), New York City resident income tax (up to 3.876%), Social Security, Medicare, and three mandatory New York insurance programs (SDI, PFL, SUI). That same $100,000 salary leaves approximately $66,500–$68,000 in annual take-home — compared to $78,900 in Texas or Florida where state and city tax is zero.
Paycheck Calculator
Calculate your take-home pay after federal tax, state tax & deductions — salary or hourly
Understanding each layer of New York’s paycheck calculation determines whether a job offer makes financial sense, whether a raise actually improves your life, and how pre-tax deductions change your take-home more dramatically in New York than in almost any other state.
New York’s 4 Tax Layers — 2026
Layer 1: Federal Income Tax
Applied to taxable income after the standard deduction ($16,100 single / $32,200 married filing jointly for 2026):
| Taxable Income (Single) | Federal Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $12,400 | 10% |
| $12,401 – $50,400 | 12% |
| $50,401 – $105,700 | 22% |
| $105,701 – $201,775 | 24% |
| $201,776 – $256,225 | 32% |
| Over $256,225 | 35%–37% |
Layer 2: New York State Income Tax
New York State has 9 progressive brackets ranging from 4% to 10.9%. The 10.9% rate applies only to income above $25,000,000.
2026 New York State standard deduction: $8,000 (single) / $16,050 (married filing jointly)
Most workers earning $50,000–$215,000 pay an effective NY State rate between 5.5%–6.85%.
| NY Taxable Income (Single) | NY State Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $8,500 | 4.00% |
| $8,501 – $11,700 | 4.50% |
| $11,701 – $13,900 | 5.25% |
| $13,901 – $21,400 | 5.50% |
| $21,401 – $80,650 | 6.00% |
| $80,651 – $215,400 | 6.85% |
| $215,401 – $1,077,550 | 9.65% |
| Over $1,077,550 | 10.30%–10.90% |
Layer 3: NYC Local Income Tax (NYC Residents Only)
New York City residents (all 5 boroughs: Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, Staten Island) pay an additional city income tax on top of state tax:
| NYC Taxable Income (Single) | NYC Rate |
|---|---|
| Up to $12,000 | 3.078% |
| $12,001 – $25,000 | 3.762% |
| $25,001 – $50,000 | 3.819% |
| Over $50,000 | 3.876% |
Critical: NYC tax applies only to NYC residents — not commuters. If you live in New Jersey, Connecticut, or upstate New York and commute to work in NYC, you do NOT pay NYC resident income tax.
Yonkers residents: Pay a 16.75% surcharge on their NY State tax liability (equivalent to approximately 1.15% of income). Non-residents working in Yonkers pay 0.5%.
Layer 4: FICA + New York Insurance Programs
Social Security: 6.2% up to $176,100 wage base (2026) Medicare: 1.45% (no cap) + 0.9% on earnings above $200,000
New York mandatory insurance deductions:
- NY SDI (State Disability Insurance): Up to $0.60/week — maximum $31.20/year
- NY PFL (Paid Family Leave): 0.373% of gross wages — maximum approximately $354.53/year
- NY SUI (State Unemployment Insurance): 0.625% on first $12,500 — maximum $78.13/year
These three programs fund short-term disability (up to 26 weeks), paid family leave (12 weeks at 67% of wages), and unemployment insurance.
New York Take-Home Pay Examples — 2026
Example 1: $75,000 — NYC Resident, Single Filer
| Deduction | Annual | Per Paycheck (Biweekly) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | $75,000 | $2,885 |
| Federal income tax | −$10,828 | −$416 |
| NY State tax (~5.8% effective) | −$4,350 | −$167 |
| NYC resident tax (~3.76% effective) | −$2,820 | −$108 |
| Social Security (6.2%) | −$4,650 | −$179 |
| Medicare (1.45%) | −$1,088 | −$42 |
| NY SDI + PFL + SUI | −$464 | −$18 |
| Annual take-home | $50,800 | $1,954 |
Effective total tax rate: 32.3%
Example 2: $120,000 — NYC Resident, Single, 6% 401k
| Item | Annual | Per Paycheck (Biweekly) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | $120,000 | $4,615 |
| 401k pre-tax (6%) | −$7,200 | −$277 |
| Federal income tax | −$19,872 | −$764 |
| NY State tax (~6.5% eff.) | −$7,410 | −$285 |
| NYC resident tax (~3.87%) | −$4,318 | −$166 |
| Social Security | −$7,440 | −$286 |
| Medicare | −$1,740 | −$67 |
| NY SDI + PFL + SUI | −$464 | −$18 |
| Annual take-home | $71,556 | $2,752 |
The 401k contribution reduces take-home by $277 biweekly but “costs” only $277 — not $277 because it also reduces NY State and NYC tax. Effective paycheck reduction from the $7,200 401k: approximately $4,300. The remaining $2,900 is subsidised by combined tax savings.
Example 3: $200,000 — NYC Resident, High Earner
| Item | Annual | Per Paycheck (Biweekly) |
|---|---|---|
| Gross salary | $200,000 | $7,692 |
| Federal income tax | −$45,350 | −$1,744 |
| NY State tax (~7.6% eff.) | −$15,200 | −$585 |
| NYC resident tax (~3.87%) | −$7,740 | −$298 |
| Social Security | −$10,912 | −$420 |
| Medicare (1.45% all) | −$2,900 | −$112 |
| NY SDI + PFL + SUI | −$464 | −$18 |
| Annual take-home | $117,434 | $4,517 |
Combined state + city tax rate at this income: approximately 11.5% effective on $200K
Example 4: $100,000 Salary — NY vs Other States
| Location | Combined State+City Tax | Annual Take-Home | NYC Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| NYC resident | ~10.5% effective | ~$66,800 | — |
| Upstate NY (Albany) | ~6.5% state only | ~$72,400 | +$5,600 |
| New Jersey (commuting to NYC) | ~5.5% effective | ~$73,500 | +$6,700 |
| Illinois | 4.95% flat | ~$74,300 | +$7,500 |
| Texas / Florida | 0% | ~$78,900 | +$12,100 |
NYC tax premium vs Texas: Approximately $12,100/year less take-home on a $100,000 salary. At $150,000, the gap widens to approximately $17,000/year.
NYC vs Commuter — The Tax Comparison
Living in New Jersey or Connecticut and commuting to work in NYC saves the NYC resident income tax — but you still pay NY State income tax on wages earned in New York.
$100,000 earner — NYC resident vs NJ commuter working in NYC:
| NYC Resident | NJ Commuter | |
|---|---|---|
| Federal tax | Same | Same |
| NY State tax | Same | Same |
| NYC resident tax | −$3,876 | $0 |
| NJ state tax on NY income | $0 | Varies (NJ allows credit for NY tax) |
| Annual difference | — | Save ~$3,876 |
NJ commuters avoid NYC tax but face NJ’s state income tax (1.4%–10.75% progressive) on their NJ-sourced income. For income earned in NY, NJ provides a credit for NY taxes paid — preventing double taxation. Many commuters end up paying approximately the same or slightly less than NYC residents depending on their NJ income sources.
Reducing Your New York Paycheck Tax
Pre-Tax 401k Contributions
New York offers the highest combined tax saving per dollar contributed to a 401k — because contributions avoid federal, NY State, AND NYC tax simultaneously:
At $100,000 income (22% federal + 6.85% NY State + 3.876% NYC):
| Each $1,000 to 401k Saves: | |
|---|---|
| Federal tax (22%) | $220 |
| NY State tax (6.85%) | $68.50 |
| NYC tax (3.876%) | $38.76 |
| Total saved per $1,000 | $327.26 |
Every $1,000 contributed only reduces your take-home by $672.74 — not $1,000. The combined tax saving is the highest in the United States.
2026 401k limit: $23,500 ($31,000 with catch-up at 50+)
Commuter Benefits
NYC allows pre-tax commuter benefit deductions for transit and parking up to $315/month ($3,780/year). For an NYC resident in the 22% federal + 6.85% NY State + 3.876% NYC bracket, maximising commuter benefits saves approximately $1,237/year in taxes on $3,780 of transit costs.
NYC’s $15+ Minimum Wage
2026 NY minimum wage:
- NYC, Long Island, Westchester: $16.50/hour
- Rest of New York State: $15.50/hour
At $16.50/hour full-time (2,080 hours): $34,320 gross / approximately $28,500 take-home in NYC (accounting for tax exemptions and low effective rates at this income level).
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the New York income tax rate for 2026?
New York State has 9 progressive brackets from 4% to 10.9%. Most workers earning $50,000–$215,000 have an effective NY State rate of 5.5%–6.85%. NYC residents additionally pay a city income tax of 3.078%–3.876%. The combined state + city effective rate for most NYC earners is 9%–11%, making it among the highest in the nation.
Do I pay NYC income tax if I work in NYC but live in New Jersey?
No. NYC income tax applies only to NYC residents — people who live in one of the five boroughs. Commuters who live in New Jersey, Connecticut, Long Island, or upstate New York and commute to work in NYC do not pay the NYC resident income tax. They still pay NY State income tax on wages earned in New York.
How much take-home pay from $100,000 in New York City?
A single filer earning $100,000 in NYC takes home approximately $65,000–$68,000 annually after federal income tax, NY State tax, NYC city tax, FICA, and mandatory NY insurance deductions. Per biweekly paycheck: approximately $2,500–$2,615. The exact amount depends on your filing status and pre-tax deductions.
What is the Yonkers income tax?
Yonkers residents pay a 16.75% surcharge on their NY State income tax liability — not 16.75% of income. On $80,000 of income where NY State tax is approximately $4,000, the Yonkers surcharge is $4,000 × 16.75% = $670/year. Non-residents who work in Yonkers pay a flat 0.5% non-resident tax.
How does New York’s mandatory PFL deduction work?
New York Paid Family Leave (PFL) is deducted from your paycheck at 0.373% of gross wages in 2026, capped at approximately $354.53/year. In return, eligible employees can take up to 12 weeks of partially paid family leave (at 67% of their average weekly wage, up to 67% of the NY Average Weekly Wage) to bond with a new child, care for a seriously ill family member, or assist when a family member is deployed militarily.
Why is NYC take-home pay so much lower than Texas?
The difference comes from New York’s three tax layers that Texas lacks: NY State income tax (up to 6.85% for most workers), NYC city income tax (up to 3.876%), and mandatory NY insurance programs (SDI, PFL, SUI). On a $100,000 salary, these layers cost approximately $11,000–$13,000/year compared to Texas’s $0 in state and city taxes. The trade-off is access to NYC’s labour market, public transit, and urban amenities — plus New York’s stronger worker protection laws.
Related Calculators
For New Yorkers evaluating whether to buy or rent in NYC, the Mortgage Calculator shows true monthly housing costs including NYC’s high property taxes ($4,500–$6,500/year on a $600,000 Brooklyn brownstone is typical). For workers considering relocating to a no-income-tax state, the Texas Paycheck Calculator or Paycheck Calculator shows take-home across all 50 states on the same salary. And for NYC workers maximising their lower take-home, the Investment Calculator shows what consistent monthly investing produces over 20–30 years — the most powerful response to a high-tax environment.
Data Sources
Federal withholding based on IRS Publication 15-T (2026). FICA rates from SSA.gov (Social Security wage base $184,500) and IRS Topic 751. New York State income tax brackets and withholding from New York State Department of Taxation and Finance (tax.ny.gov), 2026 tax year — progressive rates
4.0% to 10.9%. New York City resident income tax rates (3.078% to 3.876%) from NYC Department of Finance (finance.nyc.gov). Yonkers resident surcharge (16.75% of state tax) from NYS Department of Taxation and Finance.
New York State Disability Insurance (SDI) employee contribution rate from NYS Workers’ Compensation Board (wcb.ny.gov) — $0.60/week cap. New York Paid Family Leave (PFL) 2026 contribution rate from NYS Workers’ Compensation Board. New York minimum wage ($16.50/hour statewide; $16.50 NYC/Long Island/Westchester) from NYS Department of Labor (labor.ny.gov). Last verified: April 2026.
This calculator provides estimates for informational purposes only. Results do not constitute tax or financial advice. New York City and Yonkers residents pay additional local income tax on top of state withholding. Consult a qualified tax professional for advice specific to your situation.
