RESEARCH · MINIMUM WAGE
New York Minimum Wage 2026
New York currently uses $17.00 in New York City, Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester; $16.00 in the rest of the state. This page keeps the wage floor itself separate from paycheck withholding, then shows what full-time work at that hourly rate can look like after federal, FICA, and state withholding assumptions.
Current New York minimum wage in 2026
As of January 1, 2026, the current reference rate for New York is $17.00 in New York City, Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester; $16.00 in the rest of the state. ExactTakeHome treats the wage floor as source-backed reference content rather than a tax output. The number here comes from the current 2026 state wage guidance linked below, with the federal DOL table used as the cross-check for 50-state consistency.
The main comparison point is the federal minimum wage of $7.25 per hour. In New York, the rate used on this page is +$8.75 above that federal floor.
Review the official labor-office page annually because minimum wage changes can happen on a calendar-year or mid-year schedule. Downstate New York has a higher statewide minimum wage than the rest of the state.
What full-time work at this wage looks like
Annualizing the wage at 40 hours per week for 52 weeks produces an estimated gross pay of $33,280 per year, or about $640 per week before taxes and deductions. The annualized example below uses the $16.00 remainder-of-state rate.
Using ExactTakeHome's 2026 withholding assumptions for a single filer with standard withholding and no pre-tax deductions, that annualized wage produces an estimated take-home pay of $27,551 per year, about $2,296 per month or $1,060 per biweekly paycheck. That implies an overall effective withholding rate of 17.2%.
This is not a promise of what every worker in New York will see on payroll. Hours fluctuate, overtime rules vary, and some states or localities apply different wage tiers by employer size or work location. The value here is comparison: it shows how the legal wage floor interacts with the same tax engine used on the rest of the site.
How New York compares with nearby states
Minimum wage is a labor-law floor, not a take-home-pay ranking. Still, workers often compare neighboring states when evaluating commuting, relocation, or remote-work options. The table below shows the current statewide comparison rate used on this site for New York and three nearby states from the same calculator network.
| State | Current wage reference | Calculator |
|---|---|---|
| New York | $17.00 in New York City, Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester; $16.00 in the rest of the state | New York calculator |
| California | $16.90 per hour | California calculator |
| New Jersey | $15.92 per hour for most employers; $15.23 for small and seasonal employers | New Jersey calculator |
| Connecticut | $16.94 per hour | Connecticut calculator |
If your choice is really between two states, run the same annualized wage through both state calculators. That isolates the withholding impact instead of relying only on the legal wage floor.
How to use this with the paycheck calculator
Minimum wage law answers one narrow question: what is the lowest legal base wage for covered work? A real pay stub still depends on hours, overtime, tips, filing status, W-4 inputs, and the tax rules for your work state. That is why the best workflow is to start with the legal wage floor here, then move into the state calculator or hourly routes for paycheck-level estimates.
- Open the New York paycheck calculator
- Browse hourly pages for New York
- Browse salary pages for New York
This article provides general information, not tax advice. Consult a qualified CPA or labor-law adviser for your specific situation.
Sources
Frequently asked questions
New York currently uses $17.00 in New York City, Nassau, Suffolk, and Westchester; $16.00 in the rest of the state. This page reflects the rate in effect on January 1, 2026 and links the relevant labor office for annual updates.
Yes. New York is +$8.75 above the federal $7.25 floor for the comparison rate used on this page.
Use the New York calculator or hourly pages for your filing status and pay frequency. The annualized example on this page assumes 40 hours per week, single filer, standard withholding, and no extra deductions.