Utah Paycheck Calculator: Take-Home Pay After Taxes (2026)

How much you actually take home in Utah after federal, FICA, and state taxes in 2026. Calculate any salary, single or married filing jointly.

Utah has a flat 4.50% state income tax. Here’s the take-home pay for a single filer at common salary levels in 2026 (federal income tax + FICA + state tax):

SalaryFederalFICAStateTake-homeEffective rate
$40,000$2,620$3,060$1,800$32,52018.7%
$60,000$5,020$4,590$2,700$47,69020.5%
$80,000$8,770$6,120$3,600$61,51023.1%
$100,000$13,170$7,650$4,500$74,68025.3%
$150,000$24,734$11,475$6,750$107,04128.6%

Enter your own salary, pay frequency, and 401(k) contributions in the calculator below to see your exact net pay - hourly, weekly, or annual.

How Utah take-home pay works

Every paycheck is reduced by three things: federal income tax (2026 brackets), FICA (6.2% Social Security + 1.45% Medicare, 7.65% combined), and a flat 4.50% state income tax. Because the state rate is flat, Utah applies the same 4.50% to every dollar of taxable income, so the state share of your paycheck is easy to predict.

Frequently asked questions

Does Utah have a state income tax?

Yes. Utah applies a flat 4.50% state income tax on top of federal income tax and FICA.

How much is $60,000 after taxes in Utah?

A $60,000 salary in Utah takes home about $47,690 a year (about $3,974 a month) for a single filer - an effective tax rate near 20.5%.

What is the take-home pay on $100,000 in Utah?

$100,000 in Utah nets roughly $74,680 a year (about $6,223 a month) after federal, FICA, and state taxes - an effective rate near 25.3%.

How is take-home pay calculated in Utah?

We subtract 2026 federal income tax, FICA (6.2% Social Security plus 1.45% Medicare), and a flat 4.50% state income tax from your gross pay. Use the calculator for married-filing-jointly, 401(k) contributions, and any salary.

Calculate your take-home in Utah

Estimate only — not tax advice. Tax year 2026, federal + FICA + state (single or married filing jointly). Excludes local/city income taxes (e.g., NYC, Philadelphia) and individual credits. See our methodology.