TakeHomePayHQ

Home › New Hampshire take-home pay

New Hampshire Take-Home Pay Calculator (2026)

Estimate your paycheck after federal, FICA, and New Hampshire state taxes. No state income tax

Your details

Estimated take-home pay (annual)
$0
$0 per paycheck · effective tax rate 0%
Take-home
Federal
FICA
State
Gross salary$0
Federal income tax$0
Social Security$0
Medicare$0
State income tax$0
401(k) contribution$0
Total tax$0
Ad slot — set "adsenseClient" and "adSlot" in config.json

How much is take-home pay in New Hampshire?

New Hampshire has no state income tax, so your paycheck keeps more than in most states. For example, a single filer earning $75,000 in New Hampshire in 2026 takes home roughly $61,593 per year — about $2,369 per bi-weekly paycheck, an effective tax rate of 17.9%. Adjust the salary, filing status, and 401(k) above to match your situation.

Want to keep more of your paycheck? Compare tax software & high-yield savings accounts See options →

Popular salaries in New Hampshire

$50,000 in New Hampshire$60,000 in New Hampshire$75,000 in New Hampshire$100,000 in New Hampshire$150,000 in New Hampshire
New Hampshire note: No wage income tax (interest/dividends tax repealed 2025).

Frequently asked questions

How much is take-home pay on $75,000 in New Hampshire?

For a single filer in New Hampshire earning $75,000 in 2026, estimated take-home pay is about $61,593 per year ($2,369 bi-weekly), after federal income tax, Social Security, Medicare, and state income tax.

What taxes are taken out of my paycheck in New Hampshire?

Federal income tax, Social Security (6.2% up to $184,500), Medicare (1.45%), and New Hampshire state income tax where applicable.

How is this calculated?

We apply 2026 IRS federal brackets and the standard deduction, FICA payroll taxes, and New Hampshire state income tax rules to your gross salary.

Take-home pay in other states

AlabamaAlaskaArizonaArkansasCaliforniaColoradoConnecticutDelawareDistrict of ColumbiaFloridaGeorgiaHawaii
Disclaimer: These are 2026 estimates for educational purposes, not tax or financial advice. Federal & FICA figures use IRS/SSA 2026 data; state figures use single-filer brackets and exclude local taxes. Your actual taxes depend on deductions, credits, and local taxes.