📖 Overview
Use this calculator to budget using realistic post-tax cash flow.
🧪 Example Scenarios
Use these default and higher-pressure example inputs to explore how sensitive this calculator is before using your real numbers.
| Input | Base Case | Higher Pressure Case |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Monthly Income ($) | 8,500 | 7,650 |
| Tax Rate (%) | 28 | 33.6 |
⚙️ How It Works
This estimates post-tax pay by applying a tax percentage to gross monthly income.
The Formula
Net Pay = Gross Income × (1 − Tax Rate ÷ 100)
| Net Pay | Estimated take-home pay after tax |
| Gross | Monthly income before any deductions |
| Tax Rate | Effective (average) tax rate as a percentage |
💡Use your effective (average) tax rate, not your marginal rate. Effective rate = total tax paid ÷ gross income. It is usually significantly lower than the top bracket.
Quick Reference
| Gross / mo | 20% tax | 25% tax | 30% tax | 35% tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $3,000 | $2,400 | $2,250 | $2,100 | $1,950 |
| $5,000 | $4,000 | $3,750 | $3,500 | $3,250 |
| $8,000 | $6,400 | $6,000 | $5,600 | $5,200 |
| $12,000 | $9,600 | $9,000 | $8,400 | $7,800 |
When To Use This
- Use this tool when you need a fast decision during active planning or execution.
- Use this before committing money, time, or tradeoffs that are hard to reverse.
- Use this to compare options using the same assumptions across scenarios.
Edge Cases To Watch
- Results can be misleading if key inputs are missing, stale, or unrealistic.
- Very small or very large values may amplify rounding effects and interpretation risk.
- If assumptions change mid-decision, recalculate before acting.
Practical Tips
💡 Use an effective tax rate aligned with your situation.
💡 Revisit this estimate when tax brackets or deductions change.
💡 Plan fixed expenses off net pay, not gross pay.
Frequently Asked Questions
❓ Is this exact take-home pay?
No, it is a simplified estimate.
❓ What about benefits and deductions?
Those are not included unless reflected in your input assumptions.