Arizona · Free Calculator · 2026 Tax Data

Arizona Net Pay Calculator 2026

Arizona deducts a flat 2.5% state income tax from your gross pay, one of the lowest flat rates in the country. Paired with federal taxes and FICA, Arizona employees can see a clear, itemized picture of exactly where each dollar goes from gross to net.

$

Net Pay (Bi-weekly)

$2,289.06

Gross (Bi-weekly)

$2,884.62

Annual Net

$59,516

Effective Tax Rate

20.6%

You Keep

79.4¢ per $1

Deductions Waterfall

Gross Pay$2,884.62
= Adjusted Gross Income$2,884.62
Federal Income Tax−$302.77
Arizona State Tax−$72.12
Social Security−$178.85
Medicare−$41.83
Net Pay (Bi-weekly)$2,289.06

Net Pay by Period

PeriodGrossTotal DeductionsNet Pay
Annual$75,000.00$15,484.50$59,515.50
Monthly$6,250.00$1,290.38$4,959.63
Bi-weekly$2,884.62$595.56$2,289.06
Weekly$1,442.31$297.78$1,144.53

Federal Tax

$302.77

Arizona Tax

$72.12

Social Security

$178.85

Medicare

$41.83

Income & Tax Breakdown

Take-Home
$59.5K
Federal Tax
$7.9K
State & Local
$1.9K
FICA
$5.7K
Total$75K

Disclaimer: Estimates use 2026 IRS tax schedules (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32) and the best available state tax parameters. Actual net pay varies by employer withholding elections, local taxes, and benefits not captured here.

Frequently Asked Questions

What deductions come out of my gross pay?

Standard deductions include federal income tax, state income tax (varies by state), Social Security (6.2% up to the wage base), Medicare (1.45%), and any voluntary pre-tax elections like 401(k) or health insurance. Post-tax items like Roth 401(k) come out after taxes are calculated.

How do pre-tax deductions reduce my net pay?

Pre-tax deductions reduce your taxable income, which lowers your federal and state income tax. However, FICA (Social Security and Medicare) is still calculated on your full gross salary. The net effect is a smaller tax bill but slightly less take-home after the deduction itself.

Does my state tax show up in the waterfall?

Yes — this calculator shows your state's income tax as a separate deduction row. If you're in a no-tax state like Texas, Florida, or Washington, that row shows $0.