New York Salary to Hourly Calculator 2026
Convert between annual salary and hourly rate in New York. Based on 2,080 hours per year (40 hrs/week × 52 weeks).
New York After-Tax Take-Home Pay
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New York Income Tax Overview
New York has a progressive income tax with rates ranging from 4% to 10.9% for top earners, plus a mandatory State Disability Insurance (SDI) deduction. The state standard deduction for single filers is $8,000 — lower than the federal standard deduction — meaning more of your income is exposed to state tax. New York's tax burden is among the highest of any state, even before factoring in New York City's additional local income tax.
Here's what a single New York State filer keeps in 2026 (state taxes only, excluding NYC): on a $50,000 salary, take-home is $40,252 per year ($3,354/month), with $2,103 going to state taxes. At $80,000, you keep $61,387 ($5,116/month), paying $3,723 in state taxes. At $100,000, take-home is $74,320 ($6,193/month) with $4,860 in state taxes. At $150,000, you keep $105,981 ($8,832/month). If you live and work in New York City, subtract another $1,500 to $5,800 from these figures depending on income — the NYC income tax adds up to 3.876% on top of state taxes.
Compared to neighboring Pennsylvania (3.07% flat tax), a New York earner at $80,000 pays roughly $1,267 more in state income taxes. Against New Jersey, the gap at $80,000 is about $751. The "live in New Jersey, work in NYC" calculation is common: you escape the NYC local income tax while still commuting in, which can save $3,000-$6,000 per year depending on income. Connecticut workers face similar combined burdens to New York at most income levels.
Watch out: New York City imposes its own income tax of up to 3.876% on residents who live and work in the five boroughs. This is separate from New York State income tax and stacks on top of it. An $80,000 NYC resident pays roughly $3,000 in city tax alone — on top of $3,723 in state tax. Combined with federal taxes, a mid-income NYC earner can face effective total rates exceeding 35%. If you work in NYC but live in New Jersey, you generally avoid the city tax.