What is on a Michigan pay stub
Gross pay. Total earnings for the pay period before any deductions — rate times hours, or salary divided by pay periods, plus overtime and any bonuses.
Federal income tax. Withheld from every US paycheck using your W-4 and the IRS Publication 15-T method. This is the same in Michigan as in every other state.
FICA — Social Security and Medicare. Social Security is 6.2% of wages up to the 2026 wage base of $184,500; Medicare is 1.45% of all wages, with an extra 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax on wages above $200,000 for a single filer.
State income tax. Michigan applies a flat state income tax of about 4.25% to wages, so the state income tax line is relatively predictable.
Local tax. Some Michigan cities or counties levy a local income tax. Check your stub for a separate city or county tax line and verify it with your local authority.
Pre-tax and post-tax deductions. Pre-tax items (traditional 401(k), HSA, Section 125 health premiums) reduce taxable wages. Post-tax items (Roth contributions, garnishments) come off after tax.
Net pay. Take-home pay — gross minus every tax and deduction above.
Estimate a Michigan paycheck
To estimate take-home pay from gross, use the Michigan paycheck calculator, which pre-selects Michigan state settings. To walk through a real stub line by line, use the PayslipIQ Pay Stub Checker.
Official Michigan source
For current Michigan withholding rules and rates, see the Michigan Department of Treasury. PayslipIQ is independent and not affiliated with any state agency.