First Paycheck Take-Home Pay Calculator (2026)

Use this first paycheck take-home pay calculator to estimate how much money may actually land in your account after FICA taxes, federal income tax, state income tax, and other deductions. Enter your hourly wage, hours worked, pay frequency, state, and filing status to get a simple paycheck breakdown.

If you are not sure when your first check will arrive, use the first paycheck date calculator first, then come back here to estimate your take-home pay.

Enter your pay details

Partial first period? Enter actual hours worked.
401(k), health insurance, union dues, etc.

Please enter your hourly wage and hours worked to continue.

Your estimated take-home pay

$0.00

estimated net pay this period

Gross pay (before deductions) $0.00
Social Security (6.2%) -$0.00
Medicare (1.45%) -$0.00
Estimated federal income tax -$0.00
Estimated state income tax -$0.00
Estimated take-home pay $0.00

This calculator estimates your first paycheck take-home pay after Social Security, Medicare, federal income tax, state income tax, and other deductions. Enter your hourly wage, the hours you worked in your first pay period, your state, and your federal filing status to see a breakdown of your estimated net pay.

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Important: this is an estimate

This tool is designed for simple first-job paycheck estimates. State tax uses approximate flat rates, not full state withholding tables. It also does not calculate local city or county taxes, overtime premiums, tips, bonuses, or every possible payroll deduction. Your actual paycheck may be different.

How to use this calculator

Enter your hourly wage from your offer letter. For hours worked, enter the actual hours in your first pay period. If you started mid-week, this will be less than a full week. Select your pay frequency (weekly, bi-weekly, or semi-monthly), your federal filing status from your W-4, and your state. If you have any voluntary deductions like a 401(k) contribution or health insurance premium, enter the total in the other deductions field.

Why your first paycheck is smaller than your gross pay

Every paycheck has two numbers: gross pay (your hourly rate multiplied by hours worked) and net pay (what actually lands in your bank account). The difference comes from mandatory deductions that apply to most W-2 workers from the first dollar earned, plus any voluntary deductions you selected.

DeductionRateNotes
Social Security (OASDI)6.2% of covered wagesEmployee portion of Social Security tax
Medicare1.45% of covered wagesEmployee portion of Medicare tax
Federal income taxBased on your W-4 and 2026 bracketsUses IRS 2026 standard deduction ($16,100 single, $32,200 MFJ, $24,150 HOH)
State income taxVaries by stateNine states have no broad wage income tax in this calculator: AK, FL, NV, NH, SD, TN, TX, WA, WY

Social Security and Medicare together are called FICA taxes and come to 7.65% of covered wages for the employee portion. They may appear on your pay stub as OASDI and MED, or sometimes just FICA. Unlike federal income tax, FICA taxes are not reduced by changing your W-4 withholding elections. For the official rates, see IRS Topic 751.

Every line on your pay stub is explained in plain English in the pay stub reading guide, including every abbreviation you might see.

First paycheck estimates by employer

Your gross pay calculation is the same at every employer: hours worked multiplied by hourly rate. But the timing of your first check and the portals you use to view it vary significantly. Use the employer guides below alongside this calculator to understand when to expect your first deposit and where to find your pay stub.

EmployerPay frequencyPaydayPay stub portal
WalmartCommonly bi-weeklyThursday for many associatesOneWalmart / GTA
TargetCommonly bi-weeklyFriday at many locationsWorkday / myTime
AmazonWeekly or bi-weeklyFriday at many facilitiesA to Z app
McDonald’sWeekly or bi-weeklyOften Friday, varies by OperatorVaries by Owner/Operator
StarbucksDepends on state and transition timingOften FridayPartner Central / MPI
Chick-fil-AVaries by OperatorOften Friday, varies by OperatorVaries by Operator
PublixGenerally weekly for store associatesGenerally ThursdayPASSPORT

Browse all employer-specific first paycheck guides by category.

What to do once you know your take-home pay

Once you have your estimated net pay, the next step is deciding how to split it. The 50/30/20 rule is the simplest starting point: 50% toward needs, 30% toward wants, and 20% toward savings. For most first-job workers getting paid weekly or bi-weekly, building even a small savings habit from the very first paycheck makes a measurable difference within a few months.

The 50/30/20 rule applied to a real first paycheck shows the actual dollar amounts at common first-job hourly wages.

Not sure when your first paycheck arrives? Use the first paycheck date calculator to estimate your first payday based on your start date.

Once you know your take-home pay, use the first paycheck budget calculator to split it into needs, wants, and savings.

This calculator provides estimates for educational purposes only. Actual take-home pay depends on your specific W-4 elections, pay frequency, state withholding rules, local taxes, overtime, tips, bonuses, benefit deductions, and your employer’s payroll processor. Federal tax estimates use 2026 IRS brackets and standard deductions based on IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32 and IRS 2026 tax inflation adjustments. State tax estimates use approximate flat rates and may not reflect all state-specific rules, deductions, credits, or local taxes. This tool does not constitute tax, payroll, legal, or financial advice. For questions about your specific withholding, consult your employer’s payroll contact or a qualified tax professional.