Frequently asked questions
- Does Washington have a state income tax?
- No. Washington does not levy a state income tax on wages. Federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare still apply. Note that WA Paid Family and Medical Leave (~0.42% employee 2025), WA Cares Fund (0.58% on all wages, opt-out limited) may still appear on your stub as separate worker-contribution lines.
- What is the Washington state income tax rate for 2026?
- Washington has no state income tax on wages, so the rate is effectively 0%.
- Are there local income taxes in Washington?
- No major localities in Washington levy a local income tax on wages. No state income tax on wages but two significant worker-contribution programs.
- What worker contributions appear on a Washington pay stub?
- Washington workers typically see: WA Paid Family and Medical Leave (~0.42% employee 2025); WA Cares Fund (0.58% on all wages, opt-out limited). These are separate from federal income tax and FICA, and they may not be modeled by the calculator above. Verify the exact percentage with your payroll team.
- Can I rely on this calculator for Washington tax filing?
- No. This calculator is educational only. It is not tax, legal, payroll, accounting, HR, or financial advice. PayslipIQ is independent and not affiliated with the IRS, SSA, the Department of Labor, the WA Department of Revenue, any payroll provider, or your employer. For filing decisions, talk to a qualified CPA or EA.
- How accurate is this for Washington?
- It uses the IRS Pub. 15-T 2026 percentage method for federal withholding, the SSA 2026 wage base of $184,500 for Social Security, the standard 1.45% Medicare rate plus 0.9% Additional Medicare on wages over $200,000, and a verified Washington state rate of 0.00% (verified 2026-05-06). Real paychecks vary because of W-4 dependents, multiple jobs, year-to-date wages, employer-specific benefit deductions, and Washington-specific worker contributions. Use it as a starting point, not a final answer.
Washington gross to net paycheck calculator.
Type any gross paycheck and see the estimated take-home pay in Washington after federal income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and with no state income tax.
In plain English (Washington)
Washington has no state income tax on wages, so the state tax line on your pay stub will read $0. Federal income tax, Social Security (6.2% up to $184,500 for 2026), and Medicare (1.45% no cap) still apply. Worker-contribution lines you may see: WA Paid Family and Medical Leave (~0.42% employee 2025), WA Cares Fund (0.58% on all wages, opt-out limited). The PayslipIQ calculator below estimates the federal portion and you can pair it with locality info if relevant.
| Gross pay | $3000.00 |
| Federal income tax (est.) | −$320.38 |
| Social Security (6.2%) | −$186.00 |
| Medicare (1.45%) | −$43.50 |
| State income tax (est.) | −$0.00 |
| Estimated take-home (net) | $2450.12 |
Tax year 2026. Federal withholding uses the IRS Pub. 15-T 2026 percentage method (Standard Withholding tables). Social Security is capped at the SSA 2026 wage base of $184,500. State tax uses the most recently verified flat or top-marginal rate and may not reflect mid-year changes, brackets, or local taxes (NYC, Yonkers, PA EIT, Ohio RITA, MD county, KY occupational, IN county, DE Wilmington, MO KC/STL, OR Multnomah). Worker contributions like CA SDI, NJ SDI/FLI/UI, NY PFL, MA PFML, OR Paid Leave, WA PFML/Cares, RI TDI/TCI, CO FAMLI are not included. Use the result as a starting point, not a final answer. Your real paycheck depends on year-to-date wages, dependents, multiple jobs, and employer-specific settings.
Snapshot, Washington 2026
Washington worker contributions
- WA Paid Family and Medical Leave (~0.42% employee 2025)
- WA Cares Fund (0.58% on all wages, opt-out limited)
These are separate from the federal payroll taxes and may appear as small line items on your stub. The calculator above does not always model them precisely. Verify with your payroll team.
Common questions (Washington)
- Does Washington have a state income tax?
- No. Washington does not levy a state income tax on wages. Federal income tax, Social Security, and Medicare still apply. Note that WA Paid Family and Medical Leave (~0.42% employee 2025), WA Cares Fund (0.58% on all wages, opt-out limited) may still appear on your stub as separate worker-contribution lines.
- What is the Washington state income tax rate for 2026?
- Washington has no state income tax on wages, so the rate is effectively 0%.
- Are there local income taxes in Washington?
- No major localities in Washington levy a local income tax on wages. No state income tax on wages but two significant worker-contribution programs.
- What worker contributions appear on a Washington pay stub?
- Washington workers typically see: WA Paid Family and Medical Leave (~0.42% employee 2025); WA Cares Fund (0.58% on all wages, opt-out limited). These are separate from federal income tax and FICA, and they may not be modeled by the calculator above. Verify the exact percentage with your payroll team.
- Can I rely on this calculator for Washington tax filing?
- No. This calculator is educational only. It is not tax, legal, payroll, accounting, HR, or financial advice. PayslipIQ is independent and not affiliated with the IRS, SSA, the Department of Labor, the WA Department of Revenue, any payroll provider, or your employer. For filing decisions, talk to a qualified CPA or EA.
- How accurate is this for Washington?
- It uses the IRS Pub. 15-T 2026 percentage method for federal withholding, the SSA 2026 wage base of $184,500 for Social Security, the standard 1.45% Medicare rate plus 0.9% Additional Medicare on wages over $200,000, and a verified Washington state rate of 0.00% (verified 2026-05-06). Real paychecks vary because of W-4 dependents, multiple jobs, year-to-date wages, employer-specific benefit deductions, and Washington-specific worker contributions. Use it as a starting point, not a final answer.
Official sources for Washington
- WA Department of Revenue
- WA Department of Labor and Industries
- Washington withholding / payroll resources
- IRS Publication 15-T (federal withholding)
- SSA Contribution and Benefit Base
PayslipIQ is independent of every agency listed. Source links are informational, not endorsement.
Other state pages
PayslipIQ provides educational information and estimated calculations only. It does not provide tax, legal, financial, accounting, employment, benefits, or payroll advice. PayslipIQ is not a CPA firm, law firm, financial advisor, payroll provider, or tax authority. Always verify your paycheck, deductions, withholdings, and tax position with your employer's payroll department, a qualified CPA, the IRS, your state tax authority, or another appropriately qualified professional. Calculations are estimates; your actual paycheck may differ based on factors specific to your employer, location, benefits elections, and personal tax situation.