Kansas Salary Increase Calculator 2026
Kansas has a progressive income tax with a top rate of 5.7%. A salary raise in Kansas may push you into a higher state bracket if your income crosses a threshold, reducing the percentage of the raise you actually keep.
Raise Impact
$2,424 more per year
That's $202/month or $93/paycheck
You keep 64.6% of your $3,750 raise after taxes
Before vs. After Raise
| Component | Current | After Raise | Difference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Annual Gross | $75,000 | $78,750 | +$3,750 |
| Federal Tax | $7,872 | $8,697 | +$825 |
| Kansas Tax | $4,275 | $4,489 | +$214 |
| FICA (SS + Medicare) | $5,738 | $6,024 | +$287 |
| Annual Take-Home | $57,116 | $59,540 | +$2,424 |
| Monthly | $4,760 | $4,962 | +$202 |
| Bi-weekly | $2,197 | $2,290 | +$93 |
Why you don't keep 100% of your raise
Your raise is taxed at your marginal rate — the rate applied to your highest dollars of income. Even though your effective rate (taxes ÷ total income) is lower, each new dollar from your raise is taxed at the top bracket you've reached. For example, if your marginal federal rate is 22.0%, every extra dollar of your raise loses that share to federal taxes alone — before state taxes and FICA. That's why raises always feel smaller than advertised.
New Salary Breakdown
After your raise
Disclaimer: Estimates use 2026 IRS tax schedules (IRS Rev. Proc. 2025-32) and the best available state tax data. Actual withholding varies by employer, pre-tax elections, and local taxes.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much of my raise do I actually keep after taxes?
It depends on your marginal tax rate. For most middle-income workers, you keep between 65% and 80% of a raise after all federal, state, and FICA taxes. Use this calculator to see your exact percentage.
Does a raise push me into a higher tax bracket?
It can, but only the dollars above the new threshold are taxed at the higher rate — not your entire salary. The US uses a progressive marginal system, so crossing a bracket line affects only the raise dollars above that line.
What is the marginal tax rate on a raise?
Your marginal rate is the rate applied to your last (highest) dollars of income. For 2026 Single filers: 10%, 12%, 22%, 24%, 32%, 35%, or 37% for federal, plus state tax and FICA on top.