New York Tax Calculator

Estimate your New York State income tax, NYC tax, federal tax, and total take-home pay for tax year 2025.

๐Ÿ—ฝ New York Tax Calculator
Annual Gross Income$80K
USD
$0$500K
Total Tax
Net Take-Home
NY State Income Tax
NYC City Income Tax
Federal Income Tax
FICA (SS + Medicare)
NY State Effective Rate
NYC Effective Rate
Federal Effective Rate
Total Effective Rate

๐Ÿ—ฝ What is the New York Income Tax?

New York State imposes a progressive income tax with nine brackets ranging from 4% to 10.9% for tax year 2025. The top rates of 9.65%, 10.3%, and 10.9% apply only to incomes above $2.155 million, $5 million, and $25 million respectively. For most working New Yorkers, the effective state income tax rate falls between 4% and 7%, depending on income and filing status.

New York City adds a second layer of city income tax for residents of Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, and Staten Island. NYC rates range from 3.078% to 3.876% on the same taxable income used for state purposes. A nurse earning $75,000 living in Queens pays NY state tax of about $3,400 plus NYC tax of about $2,550. A teacher earning the same amount living in Syracuse pays only the NY state tax. This city tax is one of the largest in the US and is a major factor in overall tax burden comparisons for metro-area workers.

A common misconception is that New York taxes all income at the top rate. Like the federal system, New York is marginal: only the slice of income within each bracket is taxed at that bracket rate. A single filer earning $200,000 pays 4% on the first $17,150, then 4.5% on the next tier, and so on. The 6.85% rate only applies to income between $323,200 and $2,155,350 for single filers. Their marginal rate is 6.85%, but their effective NY state rate might be around 6.2%.

This calculator uses 2025 New York State Department of Taxation and Finance brackets and NYC tax tables. It models standard deductions and produces estimates suitable for wage earners and salaried employees. Freelancers, business owners, and those with complex investment income should use the official NY Department of Taxation estimator or consult a CPA for a precise calculation including self-employment tax, itemized deductions, and NY-specific additions and subtractions.

๐Ÿ“ Formula

NY Tax  =  ∑ ratei × (min(Taxable, bi+1) − bi)
NY Taxable Income = Gross Income − NY Standard Deduction ($8,000 single / $16,050 married / $11,200 HOH for 2025)
ratei = NY marginal rate for bracket i (4%, 4.5%, 5.25%, 5.85%, 6.25%, 6.85%, 9.65%, 10.3%, 10.9%)
bi = Lower bound of bracket i (single: $17,150 / $23,600 / $27,900 / $161,550 / $323,200 / $2,155,350 ...)
NYC Tax = Same taxable income × NYC rates (3.078% to 3.876%) for city residents
Federal Tax = Applied separately using 2025 IRS brackets after $15,000 federal standard deduction (single)
FICA = Social Security 6.2% on first $176,100 + Medicare 1.45% on all income + 0.9% Additional Medicare on income above $200,000 (single)
Example: Single NYC resident, $80,000: NY taxable = $72,000. NY state = $3,782. NYC = $2,666. Federal = $9,214. FICA = $6,120. Total = $21,782 (27.2% effective rate). Net take-home = $58,218.

๐Ÿ“– How to Use This Calculator

Steps

1
Enter your annual gross income - Type or drag the slider to your total annual income before any deductions or withholding. Include all wages, salary, freelance, and other taxable New York income.
2
Select your filing status - Choose Single, Married Filing Jointly, or Head of Household. This affects both your NY State and NYC bracket thresholds and your standard deduction amount.
3
Choose your city residence - Select NYC Resident if you live in any of the five boroughs (Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island). Select Non-NYC if you live elsewhere in New York State. NYC residents pay an extra city tax on top of state tax.
4
Click Calculate - View your NY state tax, NYC city tax, federal tax, FICA, total tax burden, net take-home, and effective rates. The NY bracket breakdown table shows exactly how each slice of your income is taxed.

๐Ÿ’ก Example Calculations

Example 1 - Single NYC Resident, $80,000

A nurse living in Brooklyn earning $80,000 per year

1
NY taxable income = $80,000 − $8,000 NY deduction = $72,000
2
NY state tax = 4%×$17,150 + 4.5%×$6,450 + 5.25%×$4,300 + 5.85%×$44,100 = $686 + $290 + $226 + $2,580 = $3,782
3
NYC tax on $72,000 = 3.078%×$12,000 + 3.762%×$13,000 + 3.819%×$25,000 + 3.876%×$22,000 = $369 + $489 + $955 + $853 = $2,666
4
Federal tax (taxable $65,000) = $9,214. FICA = $6,120. Total tax = $21,782. Net take-home = $58,218. Total effective rate = 27.2%
Net Take-Home = $58,218/year ($4,851/month)
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Example 2 - Married Non-NYC Resident, $150,000

A married couple filing jointly living in Albany with $150,000 combined income

1
NY taxable income = $150,000 − $16,050 = $133,950
2
NY state tax = 4%×$27,900 + 4.5%×$15,100 + 5.25%×$12,800 + 5.85%×$78,150 = $1,116 + $680 + $672 + $4,572 = $7,040
3
NYC tax = $0 (non-NYC resident). Federal tax (taxable $120,000) = $16,228. FICA = $11,475.
4
Total tax = $34,743. Net take-home = $115,257. NY state effective rate = 4.69%. Total effective rate = 23.2%
Net Take-Home = $115,257/year ($9,605/month)
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Example 3 - Single NYC High Earner, $300,000

A finance professional living in Manhattan earning $300,000

1
NY taxable income = $300,000 − $8,000 = $292,000. This reaches the 6.25% NY bracket ($161,550 to $323,200).
2
NY state tax through 6.25% bracket = $17,174. NYC tax on $292,000 = $11,193. Combined NY burden = $28,367 (9.46% combined effective rate).
3
Federal tax (taxable $285,000) = $69,297. FICA = $16,168 (including Additional Medicare on income above $200,000).
4
Total tax = $113,832. Net take-home = $186,168. Total effective rate = 37.9%
Net Take-Home = $186,168/year ($15,514/month)
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โ“ Frequently Asked Questions

What are the New York State income tax brackets for 2025?+
New York State has 9 tax brackets for 2025 (single filer): 4% on $0 to $17,150; 4.5% on $17,150 to $23,600; 5.25% on $23,600 to $27,900; 5.85% on $27,900 to $161,550; 6.25% on $161,550 to $323,200; 6.85% on $323,200 to $2,155,350; 9.65% on $2,155,350 to $5,000,000; 10.3% on $5,000,000 to $25,000,000; and 10.9% on income above $25,000,000. The married filing jointly brackets are approximately double the single amounts at each tier.
What is the NYC income tax rate for 2025?+
NYC has four income tax brackets for 2025 (single filer): 3.078% on the first $12,000 of taxable income; 3.762% on $12,000 to $25,000; 3.819% on $25,000 to $50,000; and 3.876% on income above $50,000. Only residents of the five boroughs pay this tax. It is applied to the same taxable income used for NY state tax (gross income minus the NY standard deduction).
Does New York City have the highest combined tax rate in the US?+
New York City consistently ranks among the highest combined tax burdens in the US. When adding federal, NY state, and NYC taxes together, a single filer earning $300,000 faces an effective combined rate of around 38%. For incomes above $1 million, the combined effective rate can exceed 50%. Only California at the very top (13.3% state + federal) comes close to NYC's overall burden for high earners.
Do I pay NYC tax if I work in New York City but live in New Jersey?+
No. NYC income tax applies only to city residents, not to commuters. If you live in New Jersey, Connecticut, or any area outside the five boroughs and commute to work in Manhattan, you do not owe NYC income tax. You will owe NY State income tax on income earned in New York, plus New Jersey state tax on your full income. New Jersey offers a tax credit to prevent double-taxation on the same income.
What is the New York standard deduction for 2025?+
The New York standard deduction for 2025 is $8,000 for single filers, $16,050 for married filing jointly, and $11,200 for head of household. This is significantly lower than the federal standard deduction ($15,000 single, $30,000 married). As a result, your NY taxable income is $7,000 to $13,950 higher than your federal taxable income even before any NY-specific additions or subtractions.
Does New York tax Social Security and retirement income?+
No, New York exempts Social Security benefits entirely from state income tax. New York State and local government pensions are also fully exempt. Federal government civilian pensions are exempt up to $20,000 per year for taxpayers age 59.5 or older. Military retirement pay is fully exempt. Private sector pensions and 401(k) distributions are exempt up to $20,000 per year for those 59.5 and older, making New York relatively favorable for retirees despite its high income tax rates.
How does New York compare to New Jersey for income taxes?+
For middle incomes ($50,000 to $150,000), New Jersey and New York have similar state tax burdens. NJ rates range from 1.4% to 10.75% with no separate city tax for most residents. A single filer earning $100,000 pays roughly similar NY state tax ($5,800) and NJ state tax ($4,700 to $5,200) before city taxes. However, NYC residents pay an additional 3.5% to 3.9% city tax that NJ residents avoid, making NYC the higher-burden location for the same income level.
What is the New York City earned income tax credit?+
New York City offers a local Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) equal to 10% of the federal EITC amount. New York State adds a separate NY State EITC equal to 30% of the federal amount for 2025. Low-to-moderate income workers who qualify for the federal EITC automatically qualify for both NY credits, which can significantly reduce or eliminate the NYC and NY state tax liability. This calculator does not model EITC credits; eligible filers should use the official NYC Finance or NY DTF tools.
Are there other NYC taxes beyond the income tax?+
Yes. In addition to the NYC income tax shown in this calculator, NYC residents may also face: the NYC Unincorporated Business Tax (UBT) if self-employed (4% on net business income above $95,000); the NYC real property transfer tax on property sales; and NYC sales tax (4.5% city + 4% NY state = 8.875% combined in NYC). None of these additional taxes are included in this income tax calculator, which focuses on the individual income tax for wage earners.
How much does the NYC tax add to my annual tax bill?+
The NYC tax adds roughly 3.5% to 3.8% in effective rate for most incomes. At $50,000, NYC tax adds about $1,580/year. At $100,000, it adds about $3,470/year. At $200,000, it adds about $7,350/year. At $500,000, it adds about $19,000/year. For comparison, the extra NYC tax at $100,000 is equivalent to roughly $289 per month in extra withholding versus living in a non-NYC NY location.
Does Yonkers have a separate income tax?+
Yes. Yonkers (in Westchester County) imposes its own city income tax separate from NYC. The Yonkers resident income tax surcharge is approximately 16.75% of NY State tax liability (equivalent to about 1.61% effective on NY taxable income). Yonkers non-residents who work in Yonkers pay a 0.5% earnings tax. This calculator covers NYC and non-NYC NY residents; Yonkers filers should consult the NY DTF website for the Yonkers-specific surcharge calculation.