Start from gross pay.
Enter your salary or hourly rate and how often you're paid. The tool converts everything to an annual figure first.
A $75,000 salary in Florida is about $61,593 take-home a year — roughly $2,369 every two weeks — after federal tax, Social Security, and Medicare. Florida has no state income tax. Change the numbers below to match your own pay; everything updates instantly in your browser.
Florida has no state income tax, so the only income tax withholding on a Florida paycheck is federal income tax. Employees also pay Social Security tax and Medicare taxes through FICA. That simple structure makes Florida paycheck math easier than it is in many other states.
Florida is one of nine states with no personal income tax. Nothing is withheld from your paycheck for the state of Florida. Your take-home pay is gross pay minus federal income tax, Social Security tax at 6.2%, and Medicare tax at 1.45%. High earners may also owe additional Medicare tax. Because there is no Florida state income tax, net pay is often higher than it would be in a high-tax state at the same salary.
Start with gross pay, choose your pay schedule, subtract pre-tax deductions and required taxes, then read your net pay. The calculator above does all of it live as you type, showing per-paycheck and yearly take-home pay with an itemized breakdown.
Enter your salary or hourly rate and how often you're paid. The tool converts everything to an annual figure first.
Federal income tax (2026 brackets), no Florida state tax, Social Security (6.2%), and Medicare (1.45%) come out.
The remainder is your net pay — shown per paycheck and per year, with an itemized breakdown so nothing is a black box.
Florida has no state income tax, so there are no Florida income tax brackets for wages. The state income tax line on a Florida paycheck is always $0.
Florida also has no local income tax on wages. Some cities and counties have sales taxes or other local costs, but those do not reduce paycheck withholding. Workers compensation insurance is usually an employer payroll cost, not an employee income tax withholding item.
Because there is no Florida income tax, pre-tax 401(k) and health deductions only lower federal tax and, in some cases, FICA. They do not lower a state income tax bill because there is no state income tax bill to lower.
Federal income tax uses marginal 2026 tax rates from 10% to 37%, applied after the federal standard deduction or itemized deductions. Only the dollars in each bracket are taxed at that bracket's rate. Filing status, dependents, other income, credits, and W-4 choices all change federal withholding.
FICA is the Federal Insurance Contributions Act tax. It is the same in every state. Employees pay 6.2% for Social Security up to the annual wage base and 1.45% for Medicare on all wages. High earners may owe the additional Medicare tax of 0.9% once wages pass the federal threshold for their filing status.
In Florida, federal tax and FICA are the entire income tax withholding picture. That is why a Florida paycheck calculator usually shows higher net pay than a calculator for a high-tax state. The same $75,000 salary can feel different when one state takes no income tax and another state takes several percent.
These sample estimates use a single filer, the standard deduction, no dependents, no pre-tax benefits, and no extra withholding. Open the calculator to match your exact situation. Your real number depends on filing status, benefits, dependents, bonuses, overtime, and other withholding, so use these as estimates, not tax advice.
| Salary | Take-home / yr | Biweekly | Take-home % |
|---|---|---|---|
| $40,000 | $34,320 | $1,320 | 86% |
| $50,000 | $42,355 | $1,629 | 85% |
| $60,000 | $50,390 | $1,938 | 84% |
| $75,000 | $61,593 | $2,369 | 82% |
| $100,000 | $79,180 | $3,045 | 79% |
| $150,000 | $113,791 | $4,377 | 76% |
Filing status changes your federal brackets and standard deduction. Single, married filing jointly, married filing separately, and head of household each withhold differently. Pre-tax deductions reduce taxable income: a 401(k), HSA, FSA, or pre-tax health premium can lower your federal tax, which is the only income tax in Florida.
Your W-4 choices matter. Dependents, credits, second-job information, and extra withholding all change how much your employer withholds each pay period. Pay frequency changes the check amount even when annual salary stays the same: a biweekly employee gets 26 smaller checks, while a semi-monthly employee gets 24 larger checks.
Bonuses, commissions, and overtime can also change a Florida paycheck. Employers may withhold federal tax from supplemental wages at a flat rate or combine extra pay with regular wages. Social Security and Medicare still apply.
Use the Compare with another state button to see your take-home pay in Florida beside any other state, such as California or New York. Because Florida has no state income tax, moving to Florida can raise take-home pay at the same salary, though housing, insurance, transportation, and cost of living still matter.
If you are leaving Florida, run the same salary through your new state before you move. A higher gross salary may not mean a higher paycheck after state income tax, local tax, and benefit costs. Comparing real take-home dollars is the fastest way to price a relocation.
No. Florida is one of nine US states with no personal income tax, so nothing is withheld from your paycheck for state income tax.
Only federal income tax, Social Security tax at 6.2%, and Medicare taxes at 1.45% are required for most workers. On a $75,000 salary, that is roughly 18% to 22% total, leaving most of your gross as take-home pay.
With no state income tax, a Florida worker keeps the 3% to 10% that residents of states like California or New York may pay in state tax on the same salary.
That depends on your employer. Common schedules are weekly, biweekly, semi-monthly, and monthly. The calculator adjusts your per-check amount to match your pay schedule.
It is a close estimate using 2026 federal brackets and the most recent published Florida rules. Your real withholding depends on your W-4, benefits, filing status, and payroll setup, so treat it as an estimate, not tax advice.
No. Every calculation runs in your browser. Nothing is uploaded, saved, or sent to a server.
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