Michigan Paycheck Calculator 2026
Calculate your exact take-home pay in Michigan after federal and state taxes (Michigan has a state income tax).
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In Michigan, you work until Mar 24 just to cover taxes.
Workers in Alaska are done by Mar 9.
Take-home at every salary level
| Salary | Federal | FICA | State | Take-home | Eff. rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $30,000 | $1,420 | $2,295 | $1,275 | $25,010 | 16.6% |
| $40,000 | $2,620 | $3,060 | $1,700 | $32,620 | 18.4% |
| $50,000 | $3,820 | $3,825 | $2,125 | $40,230 | 19.5% |
| $60,000 | $5,020 | $4,590 | $2,550 | $47,840 | 20.3% |
| $80,000 | $8,770 | $6,120 | $3,400 | $61,710 | 22.9% |
| $100,000 | $13,170 | $7,650 | $4,250 | $74,930 | 25.1% |
| $125,000 | $18,734 | $9,563 | $5,313 | $91,391 | 26.9% |
| $150,000 | $24,734 | $11,475 | $6,375 | $107,416 | 28.4% |
| $200,000 | $36,734 | $14,339 | $8,500 | $140,427 | 29.8% |
| $250,000 | $51,304 | $15,514 | $10,625 | $172,557 | 31.0% |
Michigan Income Tax Overview
Michigan has a flat state income tax rate of 4.25%, but like Indiana, many of Michigan's cities charge their own local income taxes on top of the state rate. Detroit charges 2.4% for city residents (1.2% for non-residents working in Detroit), Grand Rapids charges 1.5%, Lansing and Flint each charge 1%, and Pontiac and Saginaw also have local rates. For Detroit residents, the combined state plus city rate is 6.65%. Michigan suburbs and smaller cities including Ann Arbor, Sterling Heights, Livonia, and Westland have no local income tax. Michigan does not have a state standard deduction in the traditional sense — instead it uses a personal exemption system (around $5,400 per person in 2026).
Here's what a single Michigan filer outside a city with local tax keeps in 2026. On a $50,000 salary, take-home is approximately $40,040 per year ($3,337/month) after federal, FICA, and 4.25% state taxes. At $80,000, take-home is approximately $61,178 ($5,098/month). At $100,000, you keep about $74,398 ($6,200/month). At $150,000, take-home is approximately $106,807 ($8,901/month). Detroit residents pay an additional $1,920 in city taxes at $80,000, dropping take-home to approximately $59,258 ($4,938/month).
Compared to neighboring Indiana (2.95% state + county taxes that average 1.5–2%), Michigan's 4.25% is slightly higher than Indiana's effective rate for most workers outside major Indiana cities. Against Ohio (which has its own municipal income taxes, with rates often 2–2.5%), Michigan suburban workers pay a similar or slightly lower combined burden than Ohio city workers. Against Wisconsin (top rate 5.3% for most earners), Michigan's flat 4.25% is more favorable for income above $40,000. Against Illinois (4.95% flat, no local city taxes), suburban Michigan workers pay less.
Watch out: If you work in Detroit but live in a suburb, Michigan law requires Detroit to withhold 1.2% on wages earned within city limits — even if you never live there. Remote workers in Detroit-area suburbs who work occasionally in downtown offices should verify what city taxes their employer is withholding. During COVID, many remote workers saw their withholding shift to reflect their home city rather than Detroit — but as return-to-office requirements increase, the Detroit city tax can reappear on pay stubs if your payroll hasn't been updated to reflect hybrid work arrangements.