Connecticut Salary to Hourly Calculator 2026
Convert between annual salary and hourly rate in Connecticut. Based on 2,080 hours per year (40 hrs/week × 52 weeks).
Connecticut After-Tax Take-Home Pay
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Connecticut Income Tax Overview
Connecticut has a seven-bracket progressive income tax with rates from 2% to 6.99%. Middle earners face meaningful rates: the 5.5% bracket begins at $50,000 of taxable income, and the 6% bracket kicks in at $100,000. Connecticut provides a personal exemption of approximately $15,000 for single filers rather than a standard deduction. No Connecticut city charges a local income tax on wages, so Bridgeport, Stamford, Hartford, and Greenwich workers all pay only the statewide rate. Connecticut uses a "tax benefit recapture" mechanism where higher earners progressively lose the advantage of lower brackets — at certain income levels, the marginal effective rate spikes above the nominal bracket rate.
Here's what a single Connecticut filer keeps in 2026. On a $50,000 salary, take-home is approximately $40,840 per year ($3,403/month) after federal, FICA, and state taxes. At $80,000, take-home is approximately $61,753 ($5,146/month), with the state taking $2,825. At $100,000, you keep about $74,723 ($6,227/month), with $3,925 going to Connecticut. At $150,000, take-home is approximately $106,332 ($8,861/month), with the state taking $6,850. Connecticut's effective rate is moderate for middle incomes but rises sharply for six-figure earners.
Compared to neighboring Massachusetts (flat 5% for most earners), Connecticut workers at $80,000 take home approximately $1,175 more per year — a meaningful advantage from Connecticut's lower brackets at that income. Against New York City residents (who pay state, city, and MTA taxes), Connecticut workers at comparable incomes take home substantially more. Against New Hampshire (no income tax), the gap is the full $2,825 per year at $80,000. Connecticut's tax burden is real but often overstated for middle incomes — the state becomes significantly more expensive for earners above $100,000 as rates approach 6%.
Watch out: Connecticut's "tax benefit recapture" is a technical provision that phases out the benefit of lower tax brackets as income rises. At certain income thresholds, Connecticut's effective marginal rate temporarily exceeds the nominal bracket rate as this recapture kicks in. The provision primarily affects higher earners ($200,000+), but it's worth understanding if you're in that range. Also, Connecticut consistently ranks among the highest states for property taxes and overall tax burden — the income tax is just one component. High-income earners evaluating New York versus Connecticut for residency should include property taxes and estate taxes in the comparison.