2026 Tax Year · Updated January 2026

New York Paycheck Calculator: 2026 Take-Home with NYC + Yonkers Tax

Calculate your New York take-home pay with the new 2026 reduced state tax brackets, NYC local income tax (3.078%–3.876%), and Yonkers 16.75% surcharge. Includes Paid Family Leave and OBBBA federal updates. Built and reviewed by a CPA.

Reviewed by Benjamin Thomas, CPA, MST
Updated January 2026
Sources: IRS, NYS Tax Dept, NYC Finance

Your Information

Step 01
Your gross annual salary before any deductions
Federal: 1.5x for hours > 40/week
NYC residents pay additional city tax. Yonkers adds 16.75% surcharge.
Children under 17 qualify for Child Tax Credit

Your Take-Home Pay

Step 02
Per Pay Period
$0
Bi-Weekly
Annual Net
$0
Monthly Net
$0
ComponentAnnual Amount
Gross Annual Pay$0
Federal Taxes
Federal Income Tax−$0
Social Security (6.2%, cap $184,500)−$0
Medicare (1.45%)−$0
New York Taxes
NY State Income Tax−$0
NY Paid Family Leave (0.388%)−$0
Net Annual Take-Home$0
Effective Tax Rate0%
BT
Senior Associate at Forvis Mazars US · 15+ years finance experience
Last reviewed: January 15, 2026

How This Calculator Works

This calculator uses the official 2026 New York State withholding tables (Publication NYS-50-T-NYS, January 2026), the 2026 NYC withholding tables (NYS-50-T-NYC), the Yonkers withholding tables (NYS-50-T-Y), and the 2026 federal withholding tables from IRS Publication 15-T.

New York reduced its five lowest income tax brackets effective January 1, 2026 under Chapter 59 of the Laws of 2025. Combined with the OBBBA federal standard deduction increase to $16,100 (single) and $32,200 (married), most New Yorkers will see a small increase in take-home pay versus 2025.

"New York has one of the most complex paycheck withholding structures in the United States. NYC residents face the highest combined state and local income tax in America at 14.776% top marginal rate. Most online calculators get this wrong by ignoring the Yonkers surcharge or NYC's separate brackets."

2026 New York State Income Tax Brackets

New York uses 9 progressive tax brackets for 2026. Each bracket only taxes the income within that range. Here are the brackets for single filers:

Taxable Income (Single)Tax Rate
$0 – $8,5004.00%
$8,501 – $11,7004.50%
$11,701 – $13,9005.25%
$13,901 – $80,6505.50%
$80,651 – $215,4006.00%
$215,401 – $1,077,5506.85%
$1,077,551 – $5,000,0009.65%
$5,000,001 – $25,000,00010.30%
$25,000,001+10.90%

NYC Local Income Tax (2026)

NYC residents pay an additional local income tax on top of state tax. NYC has its own progressive brackets (2026 rates unchanged from 2025):

Taxable Income (Single)NYC Rate
$0 – $12,0003.078%
$12,001 – $25,0003.762%
$25,001 – $50,0003.819%
$50,001+3.876%

For a single NYC resident earning $100,000, combined state + city tax typically reaches 8-10% effective rate before factoring in federal taxes.

Yonkers Tax Surcharge

Yonkers residents pay a flat 16.75% surcharge on their New York State income tax (not 16.75% of income). For example, if your NY state tax is $3,000, your Yonkers surcharge is $502.50. Yonkers nonresidents who work there pay a separate 0.5% commuter tax on earnings.

The Convenience of the Employer Rule (Critical for Remote Workers)

If you work remotely for a NY employer while living in another state, NY may still tax your income under the convenience of the employer rule. Unless your employer specifically requires you to work outside NY (necessity, not personal convenience), NY can claim those wages as NY-sourced income.

This is a major tax trap for remote workers who moved out of NY post-pandemic. New Jersey and Connecticut residents working for NYC employers are particularly affected. Some states (CT, NJ) offer credits for taxes paid to NY, but the calculation can be complex.

NY vs Other States: 2026 Comparison

State / City$100K Net Take-Home (Single)
Texas (no state tax)~$78,500
Florida (no state tax)~$78,500
Pennsylvania (3.07% flat)~$75,500
NY State (not NYC)~$73,000
NYC Resident~$69,500
Yonkers Resident~$72,400
California (single)~$72,000

OBBBA Impact for NY Residents

The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) is a federal law and does not change NY state tax rates. However, it benefits NY filers in two ways:

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the New York State income tax rate for 2026?

New York has 9 progressive tax brackets ranging from 4% to 10.9% for 2026. The state reduced its five lowest brackets effective January 1, 2026 under Chapter 59 of the Laws of 2025. NYC residents pay an additional local tax of 3.078% to 3.876% on top of state tax. Yonkers residents pay a 16.75% surcharge on their state tax.

Do I pay NYC income tax if I work in NYC but live elsewhere?

No. NYC tax applies only to NYC residents (the five boroughs). If you live in New Jersey, Connecticut, Long Island, or Westchester and commute into the city, you do not pay NYC tax. However, you still pay New York State income tax on income earned in NY under the convenience of the employer rule.

What is the Yonkers tax surcharge?

Yonkers residents pay an additional surcharge of 16.75% of their New York State income tax (not 16.75% of income). For example, if your NY state tax is $3,000, your Yonkers surcharge is $502.50. Yonkers nonresidents who work there pay a separate 0.5% commuter tax on earnings.

How does NY tax remote workers under convenience of the employer rule?

If you work remotely for a NY employer while living elsewhere, NY may still tax your income under the convenience of the employer rule. Unless your employer specifically requires you to work outside NY (necessity, not convenience), NY can claim those wages as NY-sourced. This is a major tax trap for remote workers who moved out of NY.

Why is my NYC paycheck so much smaller than my gross pay?

NYC residents face the highest combined state and local income tax in the US: 10.9% NY State + 3.876% NYC = 14.776% top combined rate. Add federal (10-37%), Social Security (6.2%), Medicare (1.45%), and Paid Family Leave deductions. A NYC resident earning $100,000 typically loses 35-40% to combined withholdings before taking home about $60,000-$65,000 net annually.

Sources & Methodology

Calculator methodology and formulas reviewed by Benjamin Thomas, CPA, MST. Last comprehensive review: January 15, 2026.

Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates for informational and educational purposes only and is not personalized tax, legal, or financial advice. NY state and local tax rules are particularly complex; consult a qualified CPA for your specific situation. MoneyMetricLab and its team are not responsible for actions taken based on calculator results.