2026 HOURLY TAKE-HOME — WISCONSIN
$27/Hour After Taxes in Wisconsin
$27/hour is roughly $56,160 per year before taxes. After 2026 federal withholding, FICA, and Wisconsin state tax, your estimated take-home pay is shown below.
$27/hour take-home in Wisconsin — annual, monthly, biweekly
| Annual | Monthly | Biweekly | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross pay | $56,160 | $4,680 | $2,160 | $1,080 |
| Federal tax | $4,559 | $380 | $175 | $88 |
| FICA | $4,296 | $358 | $165 | $83 |
| State tax | $1,227 | $102 | $47 | $24 |
| Take-home | $46,077 | $3,840 | $1,772 | $886 |
Estimated at 40 hours/week, 52 weeks/year. Single filing status, standard withholding. Overtime, unpaid time, or pre-tax deductions will change your result — use the calculator above.
$27/hour with overtime after taxes in Wisconsin
Overtime pay at 1.5× ($40.50/hr) increases your gross paycheck, but the extra wages may push federal withholding slightly higher for that period. Your final annual tax depends on total yearly income, not individual paychecks.
Based on 5 hours of overtime at 1.5× the regular rate per week, biweekly pay frequency, single filing status. Federal overtime rules under FLSA require 1.5× for hours over 40/week; some states have additional rules. Use the calculator above to model your exact hours.
$27/Hour After Taxes in Wisconsin (2026)
Working full-time at $27 per hour (2,080 hours/year) equals a $56,160 annual salary. After federal, Wisconsin state, and FICA taxes, a single filer takes home approximately $46,077 per year — $3,840 per month or $1,772 per biweekly paycheck. The combined effective tax rate is approximately 17.9%.
| Work schedule | Annual salary equivalent |
|---|---|
| Full-time (40 hrs/week, 52 weeks) | $56,160 |
| Part-time (20 hrs/week, 52 weeks) | $28,080 |
| Monthly (173.33 hrs/month) | $4,680 |
Use the calculator above to adjust for your state, filing status, and deductions.
What taxes come out of a $27/hour paycheck in Wisconsin?
A $27/hour Wisconsin worker pays federal income tax, Social Security (6.2%), Medicare (1.45%), and Wisconsin state income tax from each paycheck.