2026 Florida Hourly Wage Estimate
$15 an Hour After Taxes in Florida (2026)
Based on 40 hours per week × 52 weeks = 2,080 hours/year. Annual equivalent: $31,200.
| Federal Income Tax | $1,564 |
| State Income Tax | $0 — no state income tax |
| Social Security | $1,934 |
| Medicare | $452 |
| Effective tax rate | 12.7% |
Calculation assumptions
- Standard withholding per IRS Publication 15-T (2026)
- Social Security wage base: $184,500 (SSA 2026)
- No pre-tax deductions, no post-tax deductions
- Filing status: Single, one job
- Standard W-4 withholding (no additional withholding elections)
- Actual paycheck may differ based on employer setup, benefits, or W-4 elections
How Your FL Paycheck Works
Florida paychecks include federal income tax withholding and FICA, but no Florida personal income tax withholding. Federal withholding is calculated under IRS Publication 15-T using the wage bracket or percentage method, based on taxable wages, payroll frequency, Form W-4 entries, and filing status. FICA is separate from income tax withholding: Social Security is 6.2% on wages up to $184,500 in 2026, Medicare is 1.45% on all covered wages, and employers must withhold the 0.9% Additional Medicare Tax once an employee's calendar-year wages exceed $200,000. Florida does not impose a personal income tax, so there are no state wage withholding tables for individual income tax. Florida reemployment tax is paid by employers and is not a standard employee paycheck deduction. Estimates assume standard 2026 withholding, single filing status, and no pre-tax deductions; actual paycheck may differ.
2026 Tax Rate Quick Reference
| Tax | 2026 Rate | Wage Cap | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Federal Income Tax | 10%–37% (percentage-method withholding) | No wage cap | IRS Pub. 15-T |
| Social Security | 6.2% employee withholding | $184,500 | SSA 2026 |
| Medicare | 1.45% employee withholding | No wage cap | IRS Pub. 15 |
| Additional Medicare Surtax | 0.9% on wages over $200,000 | No wage cap | IRS Pub. 15 |
| Florida State Income Tax | None — no personal income tax | N/A | Florida DOR |
Sources Used for This Estimate
Other hourly rates for Florida
- $15 an hour after taxes
- $20 an hour after taxes
- $25 an hour after taxes
- $30 an hour after taxes
- $40 an hour after taxes
- $50 an hour after taxes